The coin has some good value, all depends if you want to sell it and the condition of the coin, but yes other than seeing the coin or picture thereof it is impossible to say.
I have seen one that looks very good, but had about 3 bad rim nicks that pushed it's value way down.
The 1645 Florin British coin worth $1400 US dollars in good condition. In a fair condition, the coin can be worth $400 US dollars, depending on silver content value.
In us Dollars a 5 florin coin would be worth about 8-10 dollars if it is in mint condition
The Australian Florin was never minted in gold.
This will depend on its date, condition, and whether it was ever circulated. A coin dealer will be able to show you the value in a book.
It depends on the denomination and condition of the coin. "Elizabeth II Regina" means "Elizabeth the Second, Queen", and "South Africa Suid-Afrika" is simply the name of the country, first in English and then in Afrikaans. All coins issued in South Africa in 1957 had both phrases ("Elizabeth II Regina" and "South Africa Suid-Afrika") on them.
Both coins are from pre-decimal Britain. The florin is worth two shillings, or 24 pence, while a half-crown is worth 30 pence
"Afrika Borwa" means "South Africa" in the Sepedi language. The value of your coin would depend on its year of mintage, denomination and condition.
100 South African Rand (R100) are worth $10.48 Australian today.
You are asking about a 2 Shilling (also called a "Florin") coin (KM#29) from South Africa. The coin is 28.3mm in diameter, weighs 11.31 grams and is 80% silver, giving it an ASW (Actual Silver Weight) of 0.2909 troy ounces. The obverse (front) of the coin has an image of King George VI of Great Britain and the words "GEORGIVS VI REX IMPERATOR" (Latin for "George the Sixth, King and Emperor"). The reverse (back) of the coin has a large shield splitting the date (that is, "19" is to the left of the shield and "37" is to the right of it), with the words "SOUTH AFRICA" and "SUID-AFRIKA" (Afrikaans for "South Africa"), separated by a rosette, above the shield and the denomination, "2 SHILLINGS" below it. 1,495,000 of these coins were produced in 1937, plus another 116 in Proof. With silver currently (as of April 5, 2010) at $18.10 per troy ounce, the "melt value" of this coin is about US$5.27. Numismatically (according to the Standard Catalog of World Coins), an example is probably worth about US$10 in Extremely Fine condition, US$30 in Uncirculated condition, and US$150 in Proof.
it is $5.00
$7.20
A Florin was a Two Shilling coin in all Commonwealth countries prior to decimalisation. At the conversion to decimal currency, a British Florin became 10 New Pence.