The new monarch is typically featured on new coins starting the following year. For example, Elizabeth II became queen in 1952, and was shown on coins starting in 1953.
Maundy Money
The sovereign needs to agree before the legislation can be passed
Mary I was crowned before Elizabeth I. Elizabeth was the heir to the throne after Mary's death.
Australia became a federation with its own constitution in 1901. Before that it was made up of sovereign states that had constitutions and worked under British law.
Princess Elizabeth
The coronation was held at Westminster, London, at Christmas 1066.The very same place Harold had been crowned before him!
No, that would have happened shortly after she became queen. (before she was officially crowned).
Singapore unilaterally declared independence from Britain in August 1963 before joining Malaysia the following month. Singapore then officially gained sovereignty on 9 August 1965 after leaving Malaysia. As such, Singapore is a sovereign nation and is not subject to British rule in the future.
For automated coin changing I believe the first ones were the British sovereign coin changers. They first came out in the late Victorian/Edwardian era (I know for sure that one was patented by John Cox in or before 1907). These early machines would let you put in a gold sovereign or half sovereign and recieve change in smaller silver coins.
Before WWII the Islands were a British colony for some fifty years. Since 1978 the Solomon Islands are an independent, self-governing sovereign nation, though retaining close ties to Australia.
Question does not make sense. No queen excepting maybe Inez de Castro was crowned posthumously- though mortuary statues were and are crowned!
Yes, George III was crowned before the Boston Massacre. He ascended to the throne on October 25, 1760, and was officially crowned on September 22, 1761. The Boston Massacre occurred later, on March 5, 1770. Thus, his coronation took place nearly a decade prior to this significant event in American history.