At an auction, it will be worth whatever the highest bidder bids.
In an internet auction these would be about $60.
one 17th century florin = $14 USD now based on current price of silver and amount of silver in florin
In us Dollars a 5 florin coin would be worth about 8-10 dollars if it is in mint condition
No. Depending on which country it comes from, it would be either sterling silver (92.5%) or a 50% silver alloy.
6000000 d
Depending on which of the Commonwealth countries it came from, a 1964 Florin (Two Shillings) would be made from either a copper-nickel alloy or a 50% silver alloy, not gold. Somebody may have gold plated it. Modified coins have no collector value.
You've got to be more specific. First, the usual definition of a florin would be the British coin worth 2 shillings (1/10th of a pound). Because of this, there would be no such thing as a "quarter of a florin" let alone "cents" which cents have never been used when referring to British currency. So a quarter of a florin would be half a shilling or sixpence. But sixpence coins would always say sixpence and never would say "a quarter of a florin" I'd look at your coins again and post a new question.
The florin was used in Italy during the Renaissance. It was equal to 72 grains of gold. It was called the Florentine florin. (Florence, Italy) __ The British Florin was introduced into the currency in 1848 with a value of Two Shillings. The coin remained in use until decimalisation in 1971 when it was replaced by the 10 New Pence coin. The collector value of a Florin would depend on the year and condition of the coin.
That would depend on the country of origin of the Florin. The last British Florins to contain silver were dated 1946. The last Australian Florins to contain silver were dated 1963. The last New Zealand Florins to contain silver were dated 1946.
Not sure but a good place to look would be on eBay where there are thousands of coins for auction and saleAnswerThere is no such thing as a silver penny. 1963 would have been about the time I was taking high school chemistry. We electroplated dimes with the copper from pennies and pennies with the silver from dimes. Your coin has no numismatic value.
A Florin would be the equivalent of a 10p, not a 20p. What you would see on it is 2s, not 20. The s stands for shilling, which would have been 5p. It would not be worth very much as there are still a lot of them about, so they are not a rare coin. If you have one, just keep it as a souvenir.
The first British Florin was issued in 1849, so it is unlikely that there would be a Half Florin coin minted any earlier. There was never a British coin called a Half Florin. If one existed, a Half Florin would be One Shilling.