A 1967 2 shilling coin is worth nothing really
A 1967 2 shilling coin uncirculated would be worth around £1.50 maximum
A 1946 shilling from the UK contains 50% silver.
A King's shilling was the money given to recruits of the Armed forces of the UK during the 18th and 19th centuries. The practice of receiving a King's shilling ended in 1879.
One Shilling GBP in 1962 had the purchasing power of about £0.72 GBP today. NOTE - This historical conversion is the result of many calculations and considerations for which I cannot take credit. The resulting answer should only be regarded as an approximation.
Under pre-decimal currency in the UK, a shilling was worth twelve pence, and a sixpence worth six pence. The UK adopted decimal currency in 1971.
Shillings haven't been used in the UK since 1971 when the British currency was metricated. At the time of conversion, the value of a shilling became five pence.
Shillings are no longer legal tender in the UK and there is no direct currency exchange because of that. A shilling (UK) was a pre-decimal coin worth 12 old pence. After the UK decimalised its currency in 1971 most of the pre-decimal coins continued to remain legal tender but had their value changed, so a shilling became worth 5 new pence, a sixpence was worth 2 1/2 etc. Over the following months many of the old coins were withdrawn from circulation and ceased to be legal tender, but the shilling and 2 shilling coins (worth 5p and 10p) continued to be legal tender until the early 1990's when they were replace by coins what were much smaller, a size that is legal tender still. If the coin was still legal tender it would be worth about $0.08. currently the coins only value is as a collectable/antique, and so it depends on the year and condition of the coin. The value was much higher in the past - a shilling in 1830 might have been the equivalent of $30 today.
Entertainment UK was created in 1966.
Able UK was created in 1966.
The Irish shilling (and pound, shilling, pence system) existed in various forms from 997, but the modern Irish pound didn't exist until 1928 and became a decimal currency in 1971 like the UK that did not use the shilling as a unit of account (however, for a time the shilling coin circulated along with the 5(new) pence coin)
Up until about 1970 the UK had a shilling, worth about 12 cents. The shilling was a 20th of a pound, now replaced by 5 pence. Austria used to have a unit of currency named the schilling, but that has been replaced by the euro.
Pre 1971 in the UK there were twelve pennies in a shilling
Shillings haven't been part of the UK currency since 1971. The equivalent coin today would be 5p.