One Shilling GBP in 1880 had the purchasing power of about £3.32 GBP today.
NOTE - This historical conversion is the result of many calculations and considerations by a purpose designed program for which I can take no credit. The resulting answer should only be regarded as an approximation.
One British shilling is equal to 24 U.S. cents.
It would depend on the country, but the British Shilling was replaced by the 5 New Pence coin in 1968. The Shillings of most other British Commonwealth countries was replaced by the 10 cent coin.
Formerly a shilling, now 5 pence.
A British shilling was 1/20 of a Pound, or 0.05 GBPAcoording to the exchange rate for December 15, 2009:0.05 British Pounds (GBP) = 0.08 US Dollars (USD)So a shilling would be equivalent to about 8 cents US
A British Shilling and the pre-decimal Shillings of any British Empire/Commonwealth countries are part of long obsolete currencies. They have been long withdrawn from circulation and no longer have an exchange rate with any other currency. At the time of Britain's conversion to decimal currency in 1971, the old Shilling converted to 5 New Pence. 5 New Pence (or 1 old Shilling) GBP in 1971 had the purchasing power of about $0.72 USD today. NOTE - This historical conversion is the result of many calculations and considerations by a purpose designed program. The resulting answer should only be regarded as an approximation based on current exchange rates.
A shilling is a British monetary coin and is not in the Bible.
The last British Shilling minted for general circulation was minted in 1966.
The Shilling has always been 1/20th of a British Pound.
A British Shilling in 1841 had the purchasing power of about £3.25 GBP today.
A shilling was a coin in British currency until 1971. It's value at decimalisation was 5 new pence.
There was no 1908 British Crown (Five Shilling) minted.
Such a coin does not exist. The British Shilling was last minted for general circulation in 1966. The British Shilling was withdrawn and demonetised in 1990 along with the larger (23.5mm) 5 Pence coins it replaced.
The was never a British 10 Shilling coin minted. A Half-Sovereign was the equivalent of 10 Shillings.
Modified coins have no collector value.
There was no 1970 British Crown (Five Shilling) coin minted. The last British predecimal Crown (Five Shilling) coin to be minted was in 1965.
Assuming you mean a British shilling, about 10 cents or so. 1948 shillings have no silver and are very common.
Roughly they can be valued between £500-£5k depending on quality