If the coin has the image of the seated figure of Britannia holding a shield and trident on the reverse, and no country name on it, it will be a British Penny minted at the Royal Mint London.
Not enough details. What country? (if there's no country on the coin, it's from the U.K) What date? Please post a new question.
The question does not say which country. The U.K. uses the penny, with lettering ... ELIZABETH II · DEI · GRA · REG · FID · DEF · 2015 · J.C ELIZABETH II DEI GRATIA REGINA FIDEI DEFENSOR Elizabeth 2nd, by the Grace of God, Queen and Defender of the Faith Engraver: Jody Clark
No its a man setting down and holding a 3 pointed spear
Two maple leaves would make it a Canadian penny. It's worth about 2 cents for the copper.
Please post a new question with the coin's date. As a rule of thumb, anything dated 1971 or later is worth only face value. Note that the phrase "Gratia Regina" is part of a longer Latin motto that's on ALL English coins, so it doesn't identify one from another.
Regina is Latin for Queen. Depending on the year of your coin, it could be either Queen Victoria (1837 to 1901) or Queen Elizabeth II (1953 to present). DG or DEI GRA is abbreviated Latin for Dei Gratia - meaning, by the Grace of God.
The value for a well preserved one could be around $250- $300.
Please look again: - Half penny, not half cent - Elizabeth II, not Elizabeth 11. - That's Queen Elizabeth (the same one in the inscription) - definitely more than just "a lady" 1966 was the next-to-last year before production of the half-penny ended, so tons of them were saved as keepsakes. Unless your coin is uncirculated it's worth no more than 20 or 25 cents.
it is worth 20$ if in good condition but if in bad condition it is worth around 7-10$
That's actually Britannia on the reverse, so it's a she, not a he. 1964 is a common date for the British pre-decimal penny, easily available for less than 50 cents.
It's a common circulation coin with no special value. Note that ALL British coins have variations on the motto Dei Gratia Regina Fid Def ... so that's not an identifying detail.
It's worth 2 cents for the copper.