There are no Queen Victoria coins dated 1837, that was the year she came to the throne. All British 1837 coins have King William IV on the obverse.
The Benedetto Pistrucci design of St. George and the Dragon was not used on British Coins until about 1871.
You very possibly have a medallion or some other type of souvenir or token commemorating the accession of Queen Victoria to the throne.
Your coin is an 1887 sterling silver British Crown (Five Shillings). It has what is referred to as the "Jubilee Bust" of Queen Victoria, 1887 being her Golden Jubilee year, which is possibly why it might have been enamelled.
Had the coin not been enamelled, and depending on its condition, it might have got anything from £15 to £150 GBP as a collectible coin.
Although these started out as genuine British circulating coins, it became fashionable at some point to create jewellery out of them.
There are examples listed on the internet of brooches, pendants, cuff links and even buttons having been made from genuine circulation coins. The enamelling is part of the jewellery making process, the coins were never minted like this.
They are not traded or collected as coins, but as jewellery, and are collectible in their own right and are attracting some relatively large prices.
In view of the collector value of an uncirculated British 1887 silver Crown, I would prefer to have the Crown. Modified coins have no collector value.
Your coin is a "To Hanover" token.
What you thought was St. George is actually the Duke of Cumberland, the King of Hanover.
See the link for more information.
The Production Budget for George and the Dragon was $32,000,000.
George and the Dragon was released on 12/31/2004.
Sovereigns were only struck in gold and not silver. The coin you have is more likely to be a crown (St George and the Dragon on the back) which has been enamelled. hard to value but around £20 - £30 (just the silver content alone is worth £15.50 at today's prices 13.8.2012)
NO! Of course the dragon wasn't St. George's. A dragon can be owned by no man. So if he claimed to HAVE a dragon, it must have been a fake. However, he did fight a dragon, which is a completely different matter...
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.
St. George and the Dragon.
dragons
It is said that Saint George killed a dragon but the story is a myth.
George was a Roman soldier. The dragon slaying is a myth.
yes it is because it has a supernatural involved(the dragon)
The duration of St. George Shoots the Dragon is 2.5 hours.
The dragon was a symbol for the devil, so by killing the dragon he was removing evil.