REGINA is Latin for Queen. You will not find REGINA on a 1949 British coin because King eorge VI (REX) was the reigning monarch. You will find REGINA on British Coins with Queen Victoria or Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse.
Regina Derieva was born in 1949.
Please check your coin. Victoria did not become queen until 1837 and British Victorian coins do not have Polo players on them.
Regina Weinreich was born on 1949-01-03.
The coin would be a 1957 British gold Sovereign. The Roman soldier would be St. George going about slaying the dragon.
a coin that says Regina on it
The cast of The Proposal - 1949 includes: Joseph Regina
Regina Baff was born on March 31, 1949, in The Bronx, New York, USA.
That motto is on ALL British coins so it doesn't help to ID a specific coin. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination and an estimate of how worn it is.
It is impossible to say because you haven't provided the denomination of the coin. I'm assuming by "St. George" you refer to St. George Slaying the Dragon, a common motif for British coins, however, your failure to provide the denomination of the coin makes it impossible to tell whether you are talking about a British Sovereign or simply a British crown or another coin completely.
A Victoria Dei Gratta Regina 5 cent coin is worth anywhere from $10 to $20 dollars. The price is determined by the year and condition of the coin.
Any British coin, or any coin from any of the 50 plus British Empire/Commonwealth countries might have had that inscription in 1949. However, if there is no country name and the entire inscription as written appears on the "heads" side of the coin, it is most likely a British bronze Penny, Halfpenny or Farthing, or a nickel-brass dodecagonal Threepence.
Such a coin does not exist. Queen Victoria died in 1901. The legend "Victoria-dei-gra-britt-regina-fid-def-ind-imp" does not help identify a coin. It could appear on any British or British Empire coin issued from 1838 to 1901. You need to describe the design on the coin, the metal it appears to be made from and the diameter. Coins dated 1951 would have George VI on them. If you do indeed have a Queen Victoria "coin" with 1951 on it, it may well be a souvenir token commemorating the 50th anniversary of her death.