The Australian Ten Shilling note had "Half Sovereign" printed on them from 1915 to 1933.
To get a valuation, please provide the serial number and the names of the two signatories.
The was never a British 10 Shilling coin minted. A Half-Sovereign was the equivalent of 10 Shillings.
There were no 1981 British Half-Sovereign minted.
The Royal Mint did not produce a 1919 Half-Sovereign coin.
There was no British 1974 Half-Sovereign minted. The first decimal British Half-Sovereign was minted in 1980.
There were no British Half-Sovereign coins minted from 1938 to 1979 inclusive
There were no British Half-Sovereign coins minted from 1938 to 1979 inclusive
There were no British Half-Sovereign coins minted from 1938 to 1979 inclusive.
There were no British Half-Sovereign coins minted from 1938 to 1979 inclusive
There was no British coin minted called a Half-Shilling. The Sixpence was valued at a Half-Shilling. If you have a coin with Half-Shilling inscribed on it somewhere, please provide the country name and any other useful information about the coin.
There were never any British Two and a Half-Sovereign coins minted.
The Royal Mint did not produce any British Half-Sovereign coins from 1938 to 1979 inclusive.
The Guinea and its fractional denominations were withdrawn from circulation in 1816 and effectively replaced by the Sovereign and Half-Sovereign (One Pound and Ten Shillings respectively). When the Guinea was in circulation, it was worth One Pound and One Shilling (or 21 Shillings). The Shilling was progressively withdrawn from circulation after decimalisation. The Shilling became 5 New Pence in the new decimal currency. A Half-Guinea in modern terms, would be the equivalent of 55 Pence.