If it is dated 1886, with a young Victoria on the obverse and the George and the Dragon design on the reverse, it will be a 22 carat gold Sovereign.
The Half-Sovereign coin did not feature George and the Dragon until the second half of 1893.
The Half-Sovereign is 19.3 mm in diameter, the Sovereign is 22.05 mm in diameter.
The 38.6 mm diameter sterling silver Crown coin did not feature George and the Dragon until 1887.
If this does not identify your coin, you possibly have some sort of commemorative token or medallion.
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria died in 1901. 1920 British coins featured King George V.
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria did not become Queen until 1837 and the first coins with her image are dated 1838. King George IV was King in 1824.
No.
CL and G-DRAGON have never dated.
No
Has victoria dated any one else besides beck(avan jogia).
George Michael has never dated Brooke Shields, he is a homosexual, he has only dated men.
They never dated.
They never dated.
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria died in 1901. The legend "Victoria-dei-gra-britt-regina-fid-def-ind-imp" does not help identify a coin. It could appear on any British or British Empire coin issued from 1838 to 1901. You need to describe the design on the coin, the metal it appears to be made from and the diameter. Coins dated 1951 would have George VI on them. If you do indeed have a Queen Victoria "coin" with 1951 on it, it may well be a souvenir token commemorating the 50th anniversary of her death.
Yes,I saw a picture of them kissing
Well, you are certainly correct about it being odd. The last Half-Sovereign coins minted with Queen Victoria's image on them, were dated 1901. A genuine 22 carat gold Half-Sovereign is 19.3mm in diameter and weighs 3.99 grams. A 1915 Half-Sovereign should have King George V on the obverse and St George and the dragon on the reverse. 1915 was not a significant year for the commemoration of any momentus events in the life of Queen Victoria, so it is unlikely that the coin is a commemorative souvenir, medallion or token. If the coin does not match the specification for a genuine Half-Sovereign coin, it is quite possible that the coin is a gambling token made from something much cheaper than gold.