Such a coin does not exist.
Queen Victoria died in 1901. 1920 British Coins featured King George V.
it is worth around 100 quid
Any value would depend on the year and condition of the coin. At the very least, it will be worth its gold content at current gold values.
A Queen Victoria 2 cent stamp can be worth up to $500 Canadian if it was printed in a specific time period.
You have some sort of a memorial token or medallion, possibly not worth a great deal. The date has no particular significance. It does not represent her birthday, coronation, marriage, any of her Jubilees, her death or burial. Queen Victoria died on 22-January-1901.
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria died in 1901.
An 1893 British coin has one of two possible busts of Queen Victoria (both veiled). 1. The "Jubilee" bust shows an older Queen Victoria with a small crown on her head. 2. The "Old Head" bust shows a very old Queen Victoria with a tiara on her head. 1893 British coins with the Benedetto Pistrucci design of St George and the dragon on the reverse include the - Five Pound, Two Pound, Sovereign and Half-Sovereign coins in 22 carat gold Crown (Five Shillings) in sterling silver. The Five Pound coin is 36.02 mm in diameter The Two Pound coin is 28.4 mm in diameter The Sovereign coin is 22.05 mm in diameter The Half-Sovereign coin is 19.3 mm in diameter The Crown coin is 38.6 mm in diameter
1000000
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria died in 1901.
You have one of those. You are lying! but if you arent they are worth 192,290 dollars usd.
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria was monarch in 1896. King Edward VII from 1901 to 1910.
There were two gold UK coins minted in 1900, the half-sovereign and the sovereign. At minimum, a gold half-sovereign would have a melt value of 4 grams of 22K gold (at the moment very roughly $120), because that's what it's made of. A gold sovereign would be worth (minimally) twice that, since it's 8 grams of the same alloy.Depending on condition (and other factors ... they were minted at four different mints, in differing quantities), they could be worth more to a collector, but you'd have to take them to a dealer to find out exactly how much.The "Victoria Dei Gra Britt Regina (Fid Def Ind Imp)" part is a standard imprint (it just means "Victoria, by the Grace of God Queen of Britain, Defender of the Faith, Empress of India") and doesn't really tell us much; it's like asking how much a 1965 "Liberty In God We Trust" coin is worth (those words appear on all 1965 US coins from the penny to the silver dollar; a bona fide 1965 US coin that didn't say that would be worth a lot more).
Please check your coin. Queen Victoria died in 1901, King George V was on the throne in 1916. Also, please state a denomination of coin.