Russia does not use cents or dollars, it uses rubles and kopecks. It's more likely that your coins are in rubles because the kopeck is 1/100 of a ruble and has very little value so low-denomination coins are not often used. In any case it's not likely that your coin is worth a huge amount because as of early 2011 the ruble is trading at roughly 3¢ US.
If you need a specific please check your coin again for its denomination and post a new question (don't add to this one). The denomination will be in the Cyrillic alphabet:
рубль = ruble
копе́йк = kopeck
one cent isnt that the coin that he is on ?
1856 3 cent coin value
At a bank, any coin will be worth the face value. In other words, 50 cents. However, SOME 50 cent US coins contain some silver. Their value would be to a coin dealer, or someone that buys silver. THAT value will depend of the year of the coin, and it's condition.
a cent coin.
value of 1913 one cent uk coin
There is no such coin.
5 cent
The value of a 1922 Canadian 5 cent coin is (if in good condition) $0.20.
Such a coin does not exist. The first Australian 2 cent coin was issued in 1966.
It is a 5 cent coin. NOTE - All New Zealand 5 cent coins are no longer legal tender, but they are redeemable for face value at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
There was no Royal Wedding 20 cent coin issued.
No there as never been a U.S. coin with a 75 cent face value.