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.
Remember Roman numerals? V = 5, so you have a nickel. There's more information at the Related Question.
please answer the ?
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.
Remember Roman numerals? V = 5, so you have a nickel. There's more information at the Related Question.
please answer the ?
Symbols: Three crowns (virgin, wife, widow); triple crown; roses; basket of bread and flask of wine; roses in a robe; infant in a cradle; model of a hospital or of Warburg castle; distaff. Often Portrayed As: Queen distributing alms; Woman wearing a crown and tending to beggars; Woman wearing a crown, carrying a load of roses in her apron or mantle.
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.
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.
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.