There were four British 22 carat gold coins issued in 1902 with Edwardvs VII on them.
Five Pound (Quintuple Sovereign)(38 mm)
Two Pound (Double Sovereign)(28 mm)
Sovereign (22 mm)
Half-Sovereign (19 mm)
The Coronation of Edward VII was created in 1902.
150 dollars
King Edward Reviewing Coronation Naval Force at Spithead August 16 1902 - 1902 was released on: USA: 30 August 1902
The cast of Coronation of King Edward VII and Alexandra - 1902 includes: Queen Alexandra as herself King Edward VII as himself
The cast of Coronation of Their Majesties King Edward VII and Queen Alexandria - 1902 includes: Queen Alexandra as herself King Edward VII as himself
I am not sure what you mean by a "specimen" set. 1902 being the Coronation year for Edward VII, the Royal Mint produced two 1902 "Proof" coin sets, one of 13 coins (Five Pounds down to the Maundy Penny), the other of 11 coins (Sovereign down to the Maundy Penny). If this is what you have, you have something of some potential value. A reputable coin dealer will be able to positively identify your coin set and give you a valuation.
The Coronation of King Edward VII was in 1902, almost a year after the death of his mother, Queen Victoria. The coins, stamps, etc., with Queen Victoria were continued throughout 1901 as a sign of mourning, so there were probably various medals made for the Coronation parade, etc., sold by souvenir shops in London.
George Whitfield Grote has written: 'Ode on the coronation of King Edward VII, 1902' -- subject(s): Coronation, Poetry
Coronation Parade - No- 2 1902 was released on: USA: September 1902
Coronation Cup was created in 1902.
There were several gold coins issued to commemorate King Edward VII's coronation in 1902. The £5, £2 and sovereign. The £5 can be worth between £700 and £1500 depending on condition. The £2 coin fetches between £350 and £800 and the sovereign (£1 coin) can fetch between £180 - £500 (check the Mint location for other Edward VII dates i.e. Melbourne, Perth, Sydney or Ottawa....Ottawa coins are very rare). The mint location's initials are on the ground just above the date. Half sovereigns were also struck in 1902 and can be worth £90 - £100 at today's gold prices ($1270 an ounce - £818 an ounce) (September 2010)
Question is too vague and cannot be answered. Are you referring to the 1902 year set or proof set? You will need to expand the question.