All you have told us is that you have a British coin or a coin from any of the 50 plus British Empire/Commonwealth countries issued in the reign of George V.
"Georgivs v Britt omn rex et ind imp" is abbreviated Latin for the Kings many titles and means - "George V, King of all Britain and Emperor of India".
You need to give us the year and denomination, along with an estimate of the condition of the coin in order for us to give you an estimation of value.
Any British or Commonwealth coin issued between 1937 and 1947 would have that motto, which is an abbreviation for the latin phrase which means:
George VI, By the Grace of God, King of all Britain, Defender of the Faith, and Emperor of India
After 1947, when India became independent, the "ind imp" (or "Emperor of India") was dropped from the motto.
It tells us who the King was. It tells us nothing about the coin.
Any British or Commonwealth coin issued between 1910 and 1936 would have that motto, which is an abbreviation for the latin phrase which means:
George V, By the Grace of God, King of all Britain, Defender of the Faith, and Emperor of India
It tells us all about King George V, but nothing about the coin or country of origin.
Your coin is either a British gold Sovereign or a gold Half-Sovereign.
The Half-Sovereign is 19.3mm in diameter.
The Sovereign is 22.05mm in diameter.
PS - St George is on horse back, not the dragon.
"GEORGIVS V DEI GRA BRITT OMN REX FID DEF IND IMP" is highly abbreviated Latin and translates to - "George V by the Grace of God, King of all the British territories, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India".
The phrase varies as the Monarch and the gender of the Monarch changes, and as the circumstances of the British Empire/Commonwealth changes.
It would have appeared on all British Coins, and many of the coins of the British Empire/Commonwealth countries from 1911 to 1936.
It could be a coin of almost any denomination from any one of the more than 50 countries of the British Commonwealth.
It means .50 in U.S. coin
The life of someone who earned it
I have one. You tell me.
In circulated condition, your Great Britain penny is worth about 50 cents.DanUser:WorkingMan
that is worth about $50,000
I do not think it will devalue the stone any, but it has certainly devalued the coin. Modified coins have no collector value.
It is an Australian coin. George VI of England was also King of the Commonwealth countries.
George V coins were issued from 1911 to 1936 inclusive.
A 1918 Georgivs V British coin with a denomination of 25 would likely be a silver crown coin. In poor condition, such a coin may have significant wear, damage, or corrosion, which can reduce its collector value. The value would depend on the specific condition and rarity of the coin.
This is the legend (text) of coins issued in the reign of King George V (1910-1936). In full, the legend is: georgivs v d g Britt omn rex fd ind imp which is in Latin. It translates as follows: GEORGIVS V ... (Latin: George V) D G ... Dei Gratia (Latin: By the Grace of God) BRITT OMN ... Britanniarum Omnium (Latin: Of all the Britons) REX ... (Latin: King) F.D. ... Fidei Defensor (Latin: Defender of the Faith) IND IMP ... Indiae Imperator (Latin: Emperor of India) So, it means: George V, By the Grace of God, King of all the Britons, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India. The coin you are referring to was minted in 1917. Typically, bronze coins (¼d, ½d, 1d) would have the entire titles on the obverse (heads) side of the coin. Silver coins typically have the FD IND IMP part on the reverse (tails) side. Hope that helps.
I am unaware of any British Empire country that uses the Peso as its currency. The inscription is Latin, but abbreviated. The expression "GEORGIVS V" identifies the reigning Monarch of the period, in this case, King George V. It does not identify the country or the denomination of the coin. "DEI GRA BRITT OMN REX FID DEF IND IMP" means "By the Grace of God, King of all the British territories, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India".
Most of the 25 cent coins are worth a price between $10 and $15 each. The price will vary depending upon the coin's condition.