Lithuania will receive its first euro banknotes from Germany when the Baltic state becomes the 19th member of the eurozone on January 1, the central bank said on Thursday. The Bundesbank will lend the eurozone newcomer 132 million individual banknotes from its vaults, delivering them by the end of the year. "In 2016, when we print banknotes at one of the European Central Bank-accredited printing houses, we will return them," central banker Vitas Vasiliauskas said in a statement.
The nation of three million people is meanwhile minting its own euro coins. While the banknotes are the same across the bloc, every nation can choose its own national symbols for the coins. The Lithuanian coins will feature the national coat of arms of a knight on horseback carrying a sword and shield - gracing the country's currency since the 14th century.