Remember Roman numerals? V = 5, so you have a nickel.
There's more information at the Related Question.
If you remember your Roman numerals from elementary school, V stands for 5. If you look under the V it will say "cents". The woman is Miss Liberty, so what you have is called a Liberty nickel. This design was struck from 1883 to 1912, plus a few unauthorized pieces made illegally (but famously) in 1913. 1902 is a fairly common date for Liberty nickels; yours would retail at about $3 if worn from circulation, up to maybe $30 if almost uncirculated.
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Officially a 'Liberty Five Cent', but usually called a 'V nickel' by collectors. They were minted from 1883 to 1912. You may have seen some headlines a few months ago about a multi-million nickel. That was one of the five minted with this design in 1913. Unfortunately, there were a few more than that (21 million) minted in 1904, so yours is worth about $1.25 if well-worn or maybe $60 if uncirculated.
There's no such animal. The last Liberty cents were struck in 1857. Cents struck from 1859 to early 1909 bear a stylized image of a native American woman. If that's what you have, its value would be $1 to $7, depending on condition, for a Philadelphia coin (no mint mark), and $55 to $155 for a San Francisco coin (S mint mark under the wreath)
You have what's called a Liberty nickel (remember Roman numerals? V = 5), a design that was issued for circulation from 1883 to 1912*. The portrait on the front is of course Miss Liberty, in an interpretation very much like the Statue of Liberty. See the Related Question for more information on prices. (*) There were 5 clandestinely struck 1913 Liberty nickels that are among the rarest and most valuable American coins, but they never circulated and are all in collections.
If you remember your Roman numerals from elementary school, V stands for 5. If you look under the V it will say "cents". The woman is Miss Liberty, so what you have is called a Liberty nickel. This design was struck from 1883 to 1912, plus a few unauthorized pieces made illegally (but famously) in 1913. 1902 is a fairly common date for Liberty nickels; yours would retail at about $3 if worn from circulation, up to maybe $30 if almost uncirculated.
please answer the ?
The three crowns of St. Elizabeth are the crown of a princess, the crown of a wife, and the crown of a widow. These titles represent the stages of her life - as a princess of Hungary, as the wife of Louis IV of Thuringia, and as a widow devoted to serving the poor and sick.
No woman has won the Triple Crown as a jockey.
Mut is most often depicted as a woman wearing the double crown plus a royal vulture headdress, associating her with Nekhbet.
A woman, not "a women"A nickel, not a penny.Assuming 1904 is correct, please check the Related Question.
Mut was either depicted as a woman, sometimes with wings, or a vulture, usually wearing the crowns of royalty - she was often shown wearing the double crown of Egypt or the vulture headdress of the New Kingdom queens. Later she was shown as woman with the head of a lioness, as a cow or as a cobra as she took on the attributes of the other Egyptian goddesses.
Hera was usually depicted as a beautiful woman wearing a crown and holding a royal, lotus-tipped staff. Sometimes she held a royal lion or had a cuckoo or hawk as her familiar.
Hera was usually depicted as a beautiful woman wearing a crown and holding a royal, lotus-tipped staff. Sometimes she held a royal lion or had a cuckoo or hawk as her familiar.
She was usually depicted as a beautiful woman wearing a crown and holding a royal, lotus-tipped staff. Sometimes she held a royal lion or had a cuckoo or hawk as her familiar.
Hera was usually depicted as a beautiful woman wearing a crown and holding a royal, lotus-tipped staff. Sometimes she held a royal lion or had a cuckoo or hawk as her familiar.
Hera was usually depicted as a beautiful woman wearing a crown and holding a royal, lotus-tipped staff. Sometimes she held a royal lion or had a cuckoo or hawk as her familiar.