1st Answer:
you would have your ears or hands cut off
2nd Answer:
The punishment for theft depended on time and place, but theft was often punished with a fine based on the value of the thing stolen. Angl0-Saxon law, for example, required restitution and a fine of three times the value. So for the theft of a shilling, the law prescribed a fine of three shillings, plus restoring the original shilling.
if you stole a shilling you would haver your ears or hands cut off
generally if you did steal you would get your hands chopped off.
A skipper from the medieval times was a pirate; someone who stole and normally traveled over seas.
Thieves in medieval times were more or less the same as thieves now. They stole whatever they could pawn, use, or eat.
There was no New Jersey in medieval times.
u would die
Many regions are considered to have had a medieval period. The region most commonly thought of in that regard is Europe, but India and Japan are also considered to have had medieval periods
The term "Medieval" relating to European history, covers a period of about 1,000 years. Of those 1,000 years, the Shilling under various names, was in circulation for about 200-300 years. Any further information to assist in narrowing down the possibilities of your Medieval Shilling would be helpful.
The British shilling came into use with the Act of Union with Scotland in 1707. Before that England and Scotland had their own shilling coins the use of which dates back to medieval times. The last actual coin was minted in 1966. The shilling remained in use, circulating side by side with the same sized 5 Pence coin that replaced it until 1991.
Not in UK and if anywhere else, then not to the extreme level that it was in medieval times!!
"Bob" was the slang term for a Shilling. There were 12 Pennies to the Shilling.
There were no dinosaurs in medieval times.