There is no mint mark on Irish Euro coins, they were all minted at the same place.
The name beside a harp on euro coins is ÉIRE. That is the Irish name for Ireland, and the coins with it on it are Euro coins from Ireland. They are accepted in any of the countries that use the Euro. Other countries would have different symbols and words on their Euro coins.
Ireland uses the euro and all euro notes are the same. Irish euro coins have the harp on one side and the main euro design on the other.
On euro coins from Ireland there is a harp at the back of it but mostly it's the seamrock that is the Irish emblem.
the currency of the Republic is the euro, so only euro notes and coins are used
punt
Vatican euro coins are issued by the Philatelic and Numismatic Office of the Vatican City State and minted by Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato (IPZS), in Rome, Italy. The euro is the official currency of the Vatican City, although the Vatican is not a member of the European Union. They are still being minted.
Ireland uses the euro and have a Harp on the reverse of their coins is that cool or wat:]
The Euro is used there now. The punt is no longer legal tender. Euro coins minted in Ireland will have Éire on them.
none any more, since the euro came about. We had the punt before and all the coins had animals except 1p or 2p, well maybe it was an animal but just a bad picture :)
There were 10,191,000 60th Anniversary of the end of World War 2 British Two Pound coins minted. There were 5,140,500 400th Anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot British Two Pound coins minted.
Ireland is a state in the EU; they adopted the euro as their currency in 2002. You can see pictures of euro coins at many sites. This one is a retail site (moderator: delete if against posting guidelines) but has many very good images: http://www.eurocoins.co.uk/ireland.html