Such a coin does not exist.
The European "Medieval" period ranges from the 5th to the 15th century.
The English Shilling first entered the currency in about 1550 (16th century).
Go to England
in American money, about $1.20 a shilling. So 1000 shillings is alot of money in American dollars
Prior to decimalisation in 1971 a Shilling was one twentieth of a Pound. At decimalisation, the Shilling converted to 5 New Pence.
The official currency of Kenya is the shilling. Like the American dollar, the Kenyan shilling is divided into 100 cents.
english and american currency are both different english money is the pound (£) and american money is dollars ($)
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.
In the English speaking world, it was called money. If you refer to the British currency, there was the Guinea of 21 Shillings and the Shilling of 12 Pence.
english and american currency are both different english money is the pound (£) and american money is dollars ($)
Somali shilling in the name on the currency in Somalia
the first coin in circulation in medieval England was the penny. it was made of silver. 12 "pence" equaled a shilling and 20 shilling's equaled a pound (240 "pence"). although the term shilling was probably in use by the 1200's, only the "pence" was produced until many years later.
As of January 2014, $100 American dollars is equal to $0.608350 GBP (English money).
Neither of them is correct. You can say "I don't have money" in American English or "I haven't got money" in British English.=== ===