George III Shillings do not have holes in them.
The hole may have been bored, not at the mint, but by someone wanting to keep it with other coins on a string around the neck. I have some old British Coins with holes, obviously not part of the original design.
Any modification to a coin is very possibly illegal and makes the coin valueless as a collectible.
There has never been a 3 Shilling coin issued. For a brief period from 1811 to 1816, there were Bank of England King George III 3 Shilling bank tokens issued as a stop gap measure.
Such a coin does not exist. The last coins featuring George V were minted in 1936.
The Shilling coin was minted in most years of the reign of George II. Can you be more specific about which particular year you might be referring to?
Whats the coin shilling sixpence,penny? some more detail please
A shilling is a British monetary coin and is not in the Bible.
I have a five shilling coin with the Queen's father head on it, and a horseman on the other side dated 1951, in good condition, could you tell me what it could be worth.
Such a coin does not exist. George V was king in 1912.
The English Shilling coin was not introduced until about 1550.
Such a coin does not exist. King George V died in 1936 and King George VI died in 1952.
There was no States of Jersey 1930 One Twelfth of a Shilling coin minted.
A shilling was a coin in British currency until 1971. It's value at decimalisation was 5 new pence.
£1,000
You are asking about the Five Shilling coin issued by South Africa in 1952 in commemoration of the 300th Anniversary of the founding of Capetown. The coin bears a portrait of King George the Sixth (of Great Britain) on the front and and an image of a Schooner in Capetown harbor on the back. The coin is 50% silver and has an ASW (Actual Silver Weight) of 0.4546 troy ounces. Numismatically, it is worth perhaps a dollar or two over the silver value in circulated condition, about US$12 in Uncirculated condition, and maybe US$15 or so in Proof.