In 1910 His Imperial Majesty King Edward the Seventh died. Thus, His Imperial Majesty King George the Fifth took the throne. His Imperial Majesty was featured on Manx, British, Canadian, Australian, Cypriot, New Zealand, British Honduran, British Guyanese, Hong Kong, Malayan, Ceylonese, Indian, South African, East African, and West African coinage (I probably forgot some). Since a new obverse was necessary for the transition of power many drastic changes came to coins. Many problems needed to be ironed out, thus there are many variants to 1911 coins. So, let's say that His Imperial Majesty was featured on 17 different currencies. Let's say that each currency has 8 coins. Let's say that each coin had 2 variants. You expect me to tell you what your coin is worth?
King George V was Crowned King of the United Kingdom 22 June 1911
it may be king George i am having the coin the value is quarter rupee. pl. contact me if anyone need it my email id is anithya50@gmail.com Nithyanandam.
King George V was the reigning British monarch at the time the Titanic sunk on April 14, 1912.
It's kind of hard to say. It would depend on the condition, as well as the type. There are a lot of different types of George V coronation tablecloths. I would say that the average value is somewhere around $100-$500
George Frederick Ernest Albert, the second son of King Edward VII, was born on 3 June 1865. He became King George V on 6 May 1910 and reigned until his death on 20 January 1936.
Quite aside from the fact that all 1911 British and British Empire Pennies feature George V and have GEORGIVS V inscribed on the coin, if the head is facing towards the left then it is George V. If the head is facing to the right it is Edward VII.
Gold is currently £830-a-Troy Ounce (31.1035 gms). In 1911, there were three gold coins issued under the reign of George V (Edward VII had died in 1910). The coin you have (probably the FIVE POUND PIECE), if dated, 1911 could be worth from £1,200 - £2,500 depending on condition. Check to see that the monarch is George V and not Edward VII.
I suspect there is no 1930 Penny. It depends greatly on the quality of the coins, you may get up to $100 AUD.
It would depend on the type and condition. I've seen Coronation coins/medals going anywhere from a few dollars to a few thousand.
Such a coin does not exist. George V did not take the throne until 1910 and the first coins bearing his image were issued in 1911. If you refer to a 1907 Edward VII Penny, see the related question link below.
King George V wasn't on any coins until 1911.
1911
The "pearls" are an indication as to how worn the coin is and refers to the pearls around King George V's crown. There should be 8 pearls visible on a mint condition coin. This is the case for all George V Australian Pennies from 1911 to 1936 inclusive.
George V what?
King George V Coronation Medal was created in 1911.
No, it is not a Five Pound coin. There were four different gold coin issued in 1911 with George V on the obverse and St George and the Dragon on the reverse. The Five Pound and Two Pound, both as Proof only, and the Sovereign and Half-Sovereign. The Five Pound coin was the largest of the gold coins in 1911 at about 38mm. The Half-Sovereign was the smallest of the gold coins in 1911 at 19.5mm. I cannot find any reference to a 1911 British 16mm gold coin.
It depends on which coin it is. Half Penny, penny, threepence, shilling, sixpence...they all have different values.