I own one f these coin as it is in my collection. Unfortunately these coins are reasonabally common and there were many minted. I would estimate this coin would not be worth more than 0.12 cents in mint condition
You need to provide the most important piece of information in addition to the date - the coin's denomination! Is it a penny, a shilling, a florin?
The motto (DEI, btw, not DIE, as you can see by reading the coin) is heavily abbreviated Latin and appears on ALL British coins, so it's not useful in ID'ing anything - sort of like trying to ID a U.S. coin by saying that it has the word "Liberty" on it!
That motto, or variations of it, is on ALL British Commonwealth coins made during Elizabeth's reign, so it doesn't help to ID a particular coin. It tells us all about the Queen, but nothing about the coin.
Please post a new question with the coin's denomination and country of origin. If there is no country, it's a British coin.
You do not specify a country, a year or a denomination, but any coin with a genuine minting flaw would have some value, above the usual, as a collectible coin.
Genuinely flawed coins are not necessarily known about or documented until somebody turns up with one, since they are an "accident" of the minting process, and have escaped detection during quality control at the mint therefore, a valuation cannot be anticipated.
A reputable coin dealer should be able to identify and confirm the coin as genuine and make a valuation.
That motto, or variations of it, is on ALL British Commonwealth coins made during Elizabeth's reign, so it doesn't help to ID a particular coin.
Please post a new question with its denomination and country of issue. If there's no country shown, it's from Britain.
It would depend on the denomination and condition of the coin. "Elizabeth II Dei Gratia Regina FD" is abbreviated Latin for "Elizabeth the Second, By the Grace of God, Queen and Defender of the Faith" and it appeared, in one form or another, on all British coins (as well as coins of some colonies and British Commonwealth members) of the time.
Such a coin does not exist.
Queen Elizabeth II was crowned in 1953 and her image first appeared on coins in 1953.
Elizabeth Regina - Regina is Latin for queen.
"Elizabeth II, By the Grace of God Queen (and) Defender of the Faith" is anEnglish equivalent of "Regina II Dei Gratia Regina Fidei Difensor."Specifically, the masculine noun "dei" means "of God." The feminine noun "gratia" means "(by the) grace." The feminine noun "regina" means "queen." The feminine noun "fidei" means "of the faith." The masculine noun "difensor" means "defender."On coins, the last two words may appear as "f.d."
Dei Gratia Regina or D. G. Regina is Latin for "By the Grace of God, Queen". This can be found on almost all Canadian coins bearing Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the Second, Queen of Canada.
Regina is Latin for Queen. Depending on the year of your coin, it could be either Queen Victoria (1837 to 1901) or Queen Elizabeth II (1953 to present). DG or DEI GRA is abbreviated Latin for Dei Gratia - meaning, by the Grace of God.
Check your coin.There were no Two Pound coins issued in 1945 and, Queen Elizabeth II was not crowned until 1953.
Not enough details. What country? (if there's no country on the coin, it's from the U.K) What date? Please post a new question.
Regina means Queen. Dei Gratia Regina- By the Grace of God, Queen. These are Latin inscriptions. There was also FD meaning Fidei Defensor- defender of the faith, a title originally awarded to Henry VIII before he sought royal improvements on the marriage and divorce laws. This phrase, usually abbreviated, is also still found on British Coiins. British monarchs still bear this Papal title, despite being Anglican (or Episopal).
Literally, "by the grace of God queen" or, as we would turn it around, "queen by the grace of God."
That's either a forgery or an error. Elizabeth II is the current Queen of England. No coin dated 1900 would have her name on it, as she hadn't even been born then, let alone become queen.
ELIZATH REGINA Elizabetha Regina (Regina is latin for queen)
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth ll is Elizabeth Regina. More Information In heraldry - the art and science of noble families - Latin is used, probably to make it more impenetrable to "ordinary" people. Regina is Latin for "Queen."
Queen Elizabeth II (Elizabeth Alexandra Mary)- (Elizabeth Regina) is the current Queen of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth.