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Shilling (British coin)

The British shilling, abbreviated "1s" or "1/-", was a unit of currency and a denomination of sterling coinage worth 120 of one pound, or twelve pence. It was first minted in the reign of Henry VII as the testoon, and became known as the shilling, from the Old English scilling,[1] sometime in the mid-16th century. It circulated until 1990. The word bob was sometimes used for a monetary value of several shillings, e.g. "ten-bob note". Following decimalisation on 15 February 1971 the coin had a value of five new pence, and a new coin of the same value but labelled as "five new pence" or "five pence" was minted with the same size as the shilling until 1990, after which the shilling no longer remained legal tender.[2] It was made from silver from its introduction in or around 1503 until 1946, and thereafter in cupronickel.

One shilling
United Kingdom
Value£0.05
Mass(1816–1970) 5.66 g
Diameter(1816–1970) 23.60 mm
EdgeMilled
Composition
Years of mintingc. 1548 – 1966
Obverse
DesignProfile of the monarch (Elizabeth II design shown)
DesignerMary Gillick
Design date1953
Reverse
DesignVarious (coat of arms of England design shown)
DesignerWilliam Gardner
Design date1947

Before Decimal Day in 1971, sterling used the Carolingian monetary system ("£sd"), under which the largest unit was a pound (£) divided into 20 shillings (s), each of 12 pence (d).

Although the coin was not minted until the 16th century, the value of a shilling had been used for accounting purposes since the early medieval period. The value of one shilling equalling 12 pence (12 d) was set by the Normans following the conquest; before this various English coins equalling 4, 5, and 12 pence had all been known as shillings.[3]

The notation ss/dd for a number of shillings and pence was widely used (e.g., "19/11" for nineteen shillings and eleven pence). The form ss/– was used for a number of shillings and zero pence (e.g., "5/–" for five shillings exactly).

History edit

 
Shilling of Edward VI, struck between 1551 and 1553

The first coins of the pound sterling with the value of 12d were minted in 1503[4] or 1504[3] and were known as testoons. The testoon was one of the first English coins to bear a real (rather than a representative)[clarification needed] portrait of the monarch on its obverse, and it is for this reason that it obtained its name from an Italian coin known as the testone, or headpiece, which had been introduced in Milan in 1474.[5] Between 1544 and 1551 the coinage was debased repeatedly by the governments of Henry VIII and Edward VI in an attempt to generate more money to fund foreign wars. This debasement meant that coins produced in 1551 had one-fifth of the silver content of those minted in 1544, and consequently the value of new testoons fell from 12d to 6d.[6] The reason the testoon decreased in value is that unlike today, the value of coins was determined by the market price of the metal contained within them. This debasement was recognised as a mistake, and during Elizabeth's reign newly minted coins, including the testoon (now known as the shilling), had a much higher silver content and regained their pre-debasement value.[7]

Shillings were minted during the reigns of every English monarch after Edward VI, as well as during the Commonwealth, with a vast number of variations and alterations appearing over the years. The Royal Mint undertook a massive recoinage programme in 1816, with large quantities of gold and silver coin being minted. Previous issues of silver coinage had been irregular, and the last issue, minted in 1787, was not intended for issue to the public, but as Christmas gifts to the Bank of England's customers.[8] New silver coinage was to be of .925 (sterling) standard, with silver coins to be minted at 66 shillings to the troy pound.[9] Hence, newly minted shillings weighed 211 troy ounce, equivalent to 87.273 grains or 5.655 grams.

The Royal Mint debased the silver coinage in 1920 from 92.5% silver to 50% silver. Shillings of both alloys were minted that year.[10][self-published source?] This debasement was done because of the rising price of silver around the world, and followed the global trend of the elimination, or the reducing in purity, of the silver in coinage.[11] The minting of silver coinage of the pound sterling ceased completely (except for the ceremonial Maundy Money) at the end of 1946 for similar reasons, exacerbated by the costs of the Second World War. New "silver" coinage was instead minted in cupronickel, an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel.[12]

Beginning with Lord Wrottesley's proposals in the 1820s there were various attempts to decimalise the pound sterling over the next century and a half.[13][14] These attempts came to nothing significant until the 1960s when the need for a currency more suited to simple monetary calculations became pressing. The decision to decimalise was announced in 1966, with the pound to be redivided into 100, rather than 240, pence.[15] Decimal Day was set for 15 February 1971, and a whole range of new coins was introduced. Shillings continued to be legal tender with a value of 5 new pence until 31 December 1990.[2]

Design edit

 
The Scottish reverse design of a 1966 shilling.

Testoons issued during the reign of Henry VII feature a right-facing portrait of the king on the obverse. Surrounding the portrait is the inscription HENRICUS DI GRA REX ANGL Z FRA, or similar, meaning "Henry, by the Grace of God, King of England and France".[5] All shillings minted under subsequent kings and queens bear a similar inscription on the obverse identifying the monarch (or Lord Protector during the Commonwealth), with the portrait usually flipping left-facing to right-facing or vice versa between monarchs. The reverse features the escutcheon of the Royal Arms of England, surrounded by the inscription POSVI DEVM ADIVTORE MEVM, or a variant, meaning "I have made God my helper".[16]

Henry VIII testoons have a different reverse design, featuring a crowned Tudor rose, but those of Edward VI return to the Royal Arms design used previously.[17] Starting with Edward VI the coins feature the denomination XII printed next to the portrait of the king. Elizabeth I and Mary I shillings are exceptions to this; the former has the denomination printed on the reverse, above the coat of arms, and the latter has no denomination printed at all. Some shillings issued during Mary's reign bear the date of minting, printed above the dual portraits of Mary and Philip.[17]

Early shillings of James I feature the alternative reverse inscription EXURGAT DEUS DISSIPENTUR INIMICI, meaning "Let God arise and His enemies be scattered", becoming QVAE DEVS CONIVNXIT NEMO SEPARET, meaning "What God hath put together let no man put asunder" after 1604.[18][19]

In popular culture edit

 
A sampler in the Guildhall Museum of Rochester illustrates the conversion between pence and shillings, going up in units of ten old pennies.

A slang name for a shilling was a "bob" (plural as singular, as in "that cost me two bob"). The first recorded use was in a case of coining heard at the Old Bailey in 1789, when it was described as cant, "well understood among a certain set of people", but heard only among criminals and their associates.[20]

In the Gambia, white people are called toubabs, which may derive from the colonial practice of paying locals two shillings for running errands.[21] An alternate etymology holds that the name is derived from French toubib, i.e. doctor.[22]

To "take the King's shilling" was to enlist in the army or navy, a phrase dating back to the early 19th century.[23]

To "cut someone off with a shilling", often quoted as "cut off without a shilling" means to disinherit. Although having no basis in English law, some believe that leaving a family member a single shilling in one's will ensured that it could not be challenged in court as an oversight.[24]

A popular legend holds that a shilling was the value of a cow in Kent, or a sheep elsewhere.[25]

Mintages edit

[26]Victoria

  • 1838 - 1,956,240
  • 1839 - 5,666,760
  • 1840 - 1,639,440
  • 1841 - 875,160
  • 1842 - 2,094,840
  • 1843 - 1,465,200
  • 1844 - 4,466,760
  • 1845 - 4,082,760
  • 1846 - 4,031,280
  • 1848 - 1,041,480
  • 1849 - 645,480
  • 1850 - 685,080
  • 1851 - 470,071
  • 1852 - 1,306,574
  • 1853 - 4,256,188
  • 1854 - 522,414
  • 1855 - 1,368,499
  • 1856 - 3,168,600
  • 1857 - 2,562,120
  • 1858 - 3,108,600
  • 1859 - 4,561,920
  • 1860 - 1,671,120
  • 1861 - 1,382,040
  • 1862 - 954,360
  • 1863 - 839,320
  • 1864 - 4,518,360
  • 1865 - 5,619,240
  • 1866 - 4,989,600
  • 1867 - 2,166,120
  • 1868 - 3,330,360
  • 1869 - 736,560
  • 1870 - 1,467,471
  • 1871 - 4,910,010
  • 1872 - 8,897,781
  • 1873 - 6,589,598
  • 1874 - 5,503,747
  • 1875 - 4,353,983
  • 1876 - 1,057,387
  • 1877 - 2,980,703
  • 1878 - 3,127,131
  • 1879 - 3,611,407
  • 1880 - 4,842,786
  • 1881 - 5,255,332
  • 1882 - 1,611,786
  • 1883 - 7,281,450
  • 1884 - 3,923,993
  • 1885 - 3,336,527
  • 1886 - 2,086,819
  • 1887 - 4,034,133
  • 1888 - 4,526,856
  • 1889 - 7,039,628
  • 1890 - 8,794,042
  • 1891 - 5,665,348
  • 1892 - 4,591,622
  • 1893 - 7,040,386
  • 1894 - 5,953,152
  • 1895 - 8,880,651
  • 1896 - 9,264,551
  • 1897 - 6,270,364
  • 1898 - 9,768,703
  • 1899 - 10,965,382
  • 1900 - 10,937,590
  • 1901 - 3,426,294

Edward VII

  • 1902 - 7,905,604
  • 1903 - 2,061,823
  • 1904 - 2,040,161
  • 1905 - 488,390
  • 1906 - 10,791,025
  • 1907 - 14,083,418
  • 1908 - 3,806,969
  • 1909 - 5,664,982
  • 1910 - 26,547,236

George V

  • 1911 - 20,065,908; 6,000 (Proof)
  • 1912 - 15,594,009
  • 1913 - 9,011,509
  • 1914 - 23,415,843
  • 1915 - 39,279,024
  • 1916 - 35,862,015
  • 1917 - 22,202,608
  • 1918 - 34,915,934
  • 1919 - 10,823,824
  • 1920 - 22,865,142
  • 1921 - 22,648,763
  • 1922 - 27,215,738
  • 1923 - 14,575,243
  • 1924 - 9,250,095
  • 1925 - 5,418,764
  • 1926 - 22,516,453
  • 1927 - 9,262,244
  • 1928 - 18,136,778
  • 1929 - 19,343,006
  • 1930 - 3,137,092
  • 1931 - 6,993,926
  • 1932 - 12,168,101
  • 1933 - 11,511,624
  • 1934 - 6,138,463
  • 1935 - 9,183,462
  • 1936 - 11,910,613

George VI

English Crest

  • 1937 - 8,359,524; 26,000 (Proof)
  • 1938 - 4,833,436
  • 1939 - 11,052,677
  • 1940 - 11,099,126
  • 1941 - 11,391,883
  • 1942 - 17,453,643
  • 1943 - 11,404,213
  • 1944 - 11,586,751
  • 1945 - 15,143,404
  • 1946 - 18,663,797
  • 1947 - 12,120,611
  • 1948 - 45,576,923
  • 1949 - 19,328,405
  • 1950 - 19,261,385; 17,500 (Proof)
  • 1951 - 9,956,930; 20,000 (Proof)

Scottish Crest

  • 1937 - 6,775,877; 26,000 (Proof)
  • 1938 - 4,797,852
  • 1939 - 10,263,892
  • 1940 - 9,913,089
  • 1941 - 8,086,830
  • 1942 - 13,676,759
  • 1943 - 9,824,214
  • 1944 - 10,990,167
  • 1945 - 15,106,270
  • 1946 - 16,381,501
  • 1947 - 12,283,223
  • 1948 - 45,351,937
  • 1949 - 21,243,074
  • 1950 - 14,299,614; 18,000 (Proof)
  • 1951 - 10,961,174; 20,000 (Proof)


Elizabeth II

English Shield

  • 1953 - 41,943,800; 40,000 (Proof)
  • 1954 - 30,162,032
  • 1955 - 45,259,908
  • 1956 - 44,970,009
  • 1957 - 42,774,217
  • 1958 - 14,392,305
  • 1959 - 19,442,778
  • 1960 - 27,027,932
  • 1961 - 39,816,907
  • 1962 - 36,704,374
  • 1963 - 44,714,000
  • 1964 - 13,617,440
  • 1965 - 11,236,000
  • 1966 - 15,002,000
  • 1970 - 750,476 (Proof only)

Scottish Shield

  • 1953 - 20,663,528; 40,000 (Proof)
  • 1954 - 26,771,735
  • 1955 - 27,950,906
  • 1956 - 42,853,639
  • 1957 - 17,959,988
  • 1958 - 40,822,557
  • 1959 - 1,012,988
  • 1960 - 14,375,932
  • 1961 - 2,762,558
  • 1962 - 18,967,310
  • 1963 - 32,300,000
  • 1964 - 5,246,560
  • 1965 - 31,364,000
  • 1966 - 15,604,000
  • 1970 - 750,476 (Proof only)

Notes edit

  1. ^ 75% Cu and 25% Ni

References edit

  1. ^ . Royal Mint Museum. Archived from the original on 15 August 2018. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
  2. ^ a b Stephen Eckett; Craig Pearce (2008). Harriman's Money Miscellany: A Collection of Financial Facts and Corporate Curiosities. Harriman House Limited. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-905641-95-6.
  3. ^ a b "Requiem for the Shilling". Royal Mint Museum. from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  4. ^ Abraham Rees (1819). The Cyclopaedia; Or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature. – London, Longman, Hurst (usw.) 1819–20. Longman, Hurst. p. 403.
  5. ^ a b . Royal Mint Museum. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  6. ^ John A. Wagner; Susan Walters Schmid (December 2011). Encyclopedia of Tudor England. ABC-CLIO. p. 281. ISBN 978-1-59884-298-2. from the original on 2021-02-04. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
  7. ^ Margherita Pascucci (22 May 2013). Philosophical Readings of Shakespeare: "Thou Art the Thing Itself". Palgrave Macmillan. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-137-32458-0. from the original on 9 April 2017. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  8. ^ Manville, H. E.; Gaspar, P. P. (2004). "The 1787 Shilling – A Transition in Minting Technique" (PDF). British Numismatic Journal. 74: 84–103. (PDF) from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2015-01-19.
  9. ^ Clancy, Kevin (1990). The recoinage and exchange of 1816–1817 (Ph.D.). University of Leeds. from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2015-01-19.
  10. ^ David Groom (10 July 2010). The Identification of British 20th Century Silver Coin Varieties. Lulu.com. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-4457-5301-0. from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 6 October 2016.[self-published source]
  11. ^ The Numismatist. American Numismatic Association. 1972.
  12. ^ Christopher Edgar Challis (1992). A New History of the Royal Mint. Cambridge University Press. p. 583. ISBN 978-0-521-24026-0.
  13. ^ The Bankers' Magazine. Waterlow. 1855. p. 139.
  14. ^ Zupko, Ronald Edward (1990). Revolution in Measurement – Western European Weights and Measures Since the Age of Science. Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society. Vol. 186. pp. 242–245. ISBN 0-87169-186-8.
  15. ^ "The Story of Decimalisation". Royal Mint. from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  16. ^ Henry Noel Humphreys (1853). The Coin Collector's Manual, Or Guide to the Numismatic Student in the Formation of a Cabinet of Coins: Comprising an Historical and Critical Account of the Origin and Progress of Coinage, from the Earliest Period to the Fall of the Roman Empire. Bohn. p. 682.
  17. ^ a b "Shilling". Coins of the UK. from the original on 30 December 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  18. ^ Moriesson, Lieut.-Colonel H. W. (1907). "The Silver Coins of James I" (PDF). British Numismatic Journal. 4: 165–180. (PDF) from the original on 2014-11-10. Retrieved 2015-01-19.
  19. ^ "Hammered coin inscriptions and their meanings". Paul Shields. from the original on 9 October 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  20. ^ Sessions Papers of the Old Bailey for 3 June 1789, quoted in "bob, n.8". Oxford English Dictionary (2 ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 1989.
  21. ^ The Gambia 2008-09-12 at the Wayback Machine, eBizguides
  22. ^ The Rough Guide to the Gambia 2016-10-11 at the Wayback Machine, p. 65, Emma Gregg and Richard Trillo, Rough Guides, 2003
  23. ^ "The King's Shilling". BBC History – Fact files. BBC. 2005-01-28. from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved 2009-03-30.
  24. ^ Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 2016-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, E. Cobham Brewer, 1898
  25. ^ Gerald Kennedy (1959). A Second Reader's Notebook. New York: Harper & Brothers.
  26. ^ Club, Online Coin. "Shilling, Coin Type from United Kingdom". Online Coin Club. from the original on 2021-10-25. Retrieved 2021-11-04.

External links edit

  • Online Coin Club / Coin Type: Shilling – Listing of all issued shillings, with mintages, descriptions and photos

shilling, british, coin, british, shilling, abbreviated, unit, currency, denomination, sterling, coinage, worth, pound, twelve, pence, first, minted, reign, henry, testoon, became, known, shilling, from, english, scilling, sometime, 16th, century, circulated, . The British shilling abbreviated 1s or 1 was a unit of currency and a denomination of sterling coinage worth 1 20 of one pound or twelve pence It was first minted in the reign of Henry VII as the testoon and became known as the shilling from the Old English scilling 1 sometime in the mid 16th century It circulated until 1990 The word bob was sometimes used for a monetary value of several shillings e g ten bob note Following decimalisation on 15 February 1971 the coin had a value of five new pence and a new coin of the same value but labelled as five new pence or five pence was minted with the same size as the shilling until 1990 after which the shilling no longer remained legal tender 2 It was made from silver from its introduction in or around 1503 until 1946 and thereafter in cupronickel One shillingUnited KingdomValue 0 05Mass 1816 1970 5 66 gDiameter 1816 1970 23 60 mmEdgeMilledComposition 1503 1816 Silver 1816 1920 92 5 Ag 1920 1946 50 Ag 1947 1970 Cupronickel nb 1 Years of mintingc 1548 1966ObverseDesignProfile of the monarch Elizabeth II design shown DesignerMary GillickDesign date1953ReverseDesignVarious coat of arms of England design shown DesignerWilliam GardnerDesign date1947Before Decimal Day in 1971 sterling used the Carolingian monetary system sd under which the largest unit was a pound divided into 20 shillings s each of 12 pence d Although the coin was not minted until the 16th century the value of a shilling had been used for accounting purposes since the early medieval period The value of one shilling equalling 12 pence 12 d was set by the Normans following the conquest before this various English coins equalling 4 5 and 12 pence had all been known as shillings 3 The notation ss dd for a number of shillings and pence was widely used e g 19 11 for nineteen shillings and eleven pence The form ss was used for a number of shillings and zero pence e g 5 for five shillings exactly Contents 1 History 2 Design 3 In popular culture 4 Mintages 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Shilling of Edward VI struck between 1551 and 1553The first coins of the pound sterling with the value of 12d were minted in 1503 4 or 1504 3 and were known as testoons The testoon was one of the first English coins to bear a real rather than a representative clarification needed portrait of the monarch on its obverse and it is for this reason that it obtained its name from an Italian coin known as the testone or headpiece which had been introduced in Milan in 1474 5 Between 1544 and 1551 the coinage was debased repeatedly by the governments of Henry VIII and Edward VI in an attempt to generate more money to fund foreign wars This debasement meant that coins produced in 1551 had one fifth of the silver content of those minted in 1544 and consequently the value of new testoons fell from 12d to 6d 6 The reason the testoon decreased in value is that unlike today the value of coins was determined by the market price of the metal contained within them This debasement was recognised as a mistake and during Elizabeth s reign newly minted coins including the testoon now known as the shilling had a much higher silver content and regained their pre debasement value 7 Shillings were minted during the reigns of every English monarch after Edward VI as well as during the Commonwealth with a vast number of variations and alterations appearing over the years The Royal Mint undertook a massive recoinage programme in 1816 with large quantities of gold and silver coin being minted Previous issues of silver coinage had been irregular and the last issue minted in 1787 was not intended for issue to the public but as Christmas gifts to the Bank of England s customers 8 New silver coinage was to be of 925 sterling standard with silver coins to be minted at 66 shillings to the troy pound 9 Hence newly minted shillings weighed 2 11 troy ounce equivalent to 87 273 grains or 5 655 grams The Royal Mint debased the silver coinage in 1920 from 92 5 silver to 50 silver Shillings of both alloys were minted that year 10 self published source This debasement was done because of the rising price of silver around the world and followed the global trend of the elimination or the reducing in purity of the silver in coinage 11 The minting of silver coinage of the pound sterling ceased completely except for the ceremonial Maundy Money at the end of 1946 for similar reasons exacerbated by the costs of the Second World War New silver coinage was instead minted in cupronickel an alloy of 75 copper and 25 nickel 12 Beginning with Lord Wrottesley s proposals in the 1820s there were various attempts to decimalise the pound sterling over the next century and a half 13 14 These attempts came to nothing significant until the 1960s when the need for a currency more suited to simple monetary calculations became pressing The decision to decimalise was announced in 1966 with the pound to be redivided into 100 rather than 240 pence 15 Decimal Day was set for 15 February 1971 and a whole range of new coins was introduced Shillings continued to be legal tender with a value of 5 new pence until 31 December 1990 2 Design edit nbsp The Scottish reverse design of a 1966 shilling Testoons issued during the reign of Henry VII feature a right facing portrait of the king on the obverse Surrounding the portrait is the inscription HENRICUS DI GRA REX ANGL Z FRA or similar meaning Henry by the Grace of God King of England and France 5 All shillings minted under subsequent kings and queens bear a similar inscription on the obverse identifying the monarch or Lord Protector during the Commonwealth with the portrait usually flipping left facing to right facing or vice versa between monarchs The reverse features the escutcheon of the Royal Arms of England surrounded by the inscription POSVI DEVM ADIVTORE MEVM or a variant meaning I have made God my helper 16 Henry VIII testoons have a different reverse design featuring a crowned Tudor rose but those of Edward VI return to the Royal Arms design used previously 17 Starting with Edward VI the coins feature the denomination XII printed next to the portrait of the king Elizabeth I and Mary I shillings are exceptions to this the former has the denomination printed on the reverse above the coat of arms and the latter has no denomination printed at all Some shillings issued during Mary s reign bear the date of minting printed above the dual portraits of Mary and Philip 17 Early shillings of James I feature the alternative reverse inscription EXURGAT DEUS DISSIPENTUR INIMICI meaning Let God arise and His enemies be scattered becoming QVAE DEVS CONIVNXIT NEMO SEPARET meaning What God hath put together let no man put asunder after 1604 18 19 In popular culture edit nbsp A sampler in the Guildhall Museum of Rochester illustrates the conversion between pence and shillings going up in units of ten old pennies A slang name for a shilling was a bob plural as singular as in that cost me two bob The first recorded use was in a case of coining heard at the Old Bailey in 1789 when it was described as cant well understood among a certain set of people but heard only among criminals and their associates 20 In the Gambia white people are called toubabs which may derive from the colonial practice of paying locals two shillings for running errands 21 An alternate etymology holds that the name is derived from French toubib i e doctor 22 To take the King s shilling was to enlist in the army or navy a phrase dating back to the early 19th century 23 To cut someone off with a shilling often quoted as cut off without a shilling means to disinherit Although having no basis in English law some believe that leaving a family member a single shilling in one s will ensured that it could not be challenged in court as an oversight 24 A popular legend holds that a shilling was the value of a cow in Kent or a sheep elsewhere 25 Mintages edit 26 Victoria 1838 1 956 240 1839 5 666 760 1840 1 639 440 1841 875 160 1842 2 094 840 1843 1 465 200 1844 4 466 760 1845 4 082 760 1846 4 031 280 1848 1 041 480 1849 645 480 1850 685 080 1851 470 071 1852 1 306 574 1853 4 256 188 1854 522 414 1855 1 368 499 1856 3 168 600 1857 2 562 120 1858 3 108 600 1859 4 561 920 1860 1 671 120 1861 1 382 040 1862 954 360 1863 839 320 1864 4 518 360 1865 5 619 240 1866 4 989 600 1867 2 166 120 1868 3 330 360 1869 736 560 1870 1 467 471 1871 4 910 010 1872 8 897 781 1873 6 589 598 1874 5 503 747 1875 4 353 983 1876 1 057 387 1877 2 980 703 1878 3 127 131 1879 3 611 407 1880 4 842 786 1881 5 255 332 1882 1 611 786 1883 7 281 450 1884 3 923 993 1885 3 336 527 1886 2 086 819 1887 4 034 133 1888 4 526 856 1889 7 039 628 1890 8 794 042 1891 5 665 348 1892 4 591 622 1893 7 040 386 1894 5 953 152 1895 8 880 651 1896 9 264 551 1897 6 270 364 1898 9 768 703 1899 10 965 382 1900 10 937 590 1901 3 426 294 Edward VII 1902 7 905 604 1903 2 061 823 1904 2 040 161 1905 488 390 1906 10 791 025 1907 14 083 418 1908 3 806 969 1909 5 664 982 1910 26 547 236George V 1911 20 065 908 6 000 Proof 1912 15 594 009 1913 9 011 509 1914 23 415 843 1915 39 279 024 1916 35 862 015 1917 22 202 608 1918 34 915 934 1919 10 823 824 1920 22 865 142 1921 22 648 763 1922 27 215 738 1923 14 575 243 1924 9 250 095 1925 5 418 764 1926 22 516 453 1927 9 262 244 1928 18 136 778 1929 19 343 006 1930 3 137 092 1931 6 993 926 1932 12 168 101 1933 11 511 624 1934 6 138 463 1935 9 183 462 1936 11 910 613 George VI English Crest 1937 8 359 524 26 000 Proof 1938 4 833 436 1939 11 052 677 1940 11 099 126 1941 11 391 883 1942 17 453 643 1943 11 404 213 1944 11 586 751 1945 15 143 404 1946 18 663 797 1947 12 120 611 1948 45 576 923 1949 19 328 405 1950 19 261 385 17 500 Proof 1951 9 956 930 20 000 Proof Scottish Crest 1937 6 775 877 26 000 Proof 1938 4 797 852 1939 10 263 892 1940 9 913 089 1941 8 086 830 1942 13 676 759 1943 9 824 214 1944 10 990 167 1945 15 106 270 1946 16 381 501 1947 12 283 223 1948 45 351 937 1949 21 243 074 1950 14 299 614 18 000 Proof 1951 10 961 174 20 000 Proof Elizabeth II English Shield 1953 41 943 800 40 000 Proof 1954 30 162 032 1955 45 259 908 1956 44 970 009 1957 42 774 217 1958 14 392 305 1959 19 442 778 1960 27 027 932 1961 39 816 907 1962 36 704 374 1963 44 714 000 1964 13 617 440 1965 11 236 000 1966 15 002 000 1970 750 476 Proof only Scottish Shield 1953 20 663 528 40 000 Proof 1954 26 771 735 1955 27 950 906 1956 42 853 639 1957 17 959 988 1958 40 822 557 1959 1 012 988 1960 14 375 932 1961 2 762 558 1962 18 967 310 1963 32 300 000 1964 5 246 560 1965 31 364 000 1966 15 604 000 1970 750 476 Proof only Notes edit 75 Cu and 25 NiReferences edit Pounds shillings amp pence Royal Mint Museum Archived from the original on 15 August 2018 Retrieved 2 February 2019 a b Stephen Eckett Craig Pearce 2008 Harriman s Money Miscellany A Collection of Financial Facts and Corporate Curiosities Harriman House Limited p 19 ISBN 978 1 905641 95 6 a b Requiem for the Shilling Royal Mint Museum Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Abraham Rees 1819 The Cyclopaedia Or Universal Dictionary of Arts Sciences and Literature London Longman Hurst usw 1819 20 Longman Hurst p 403 a b Shilling Royal Mint Museum Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 14 November 2014 John A Wagner Susan Walters Schmid December 2011 Encyclopedia of Tudor England ABC CLIO p 281 ISBN 978 1 59884 298 2 Archived from the original on 2021 02 04 Retrieved 2016 10 06 Margherita Pascucci 22 May 2013 Philosophical Readings of Shakespeare Thou Art the Thing Itself Palgrave Macmillan p 103 ISBN 978 1 137 32458 0 Archived from the original on 9 April 2017 Retrieved 6 October 2016 Manville H E Gaspar P P 2004 The 1787 Shilling A Transition in Minting Technique PDF British Numismatic Journal 74 84 103 Archived PDF from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2015 01 19 Clancy Kevin 1990 The recoinage and exchange of 1816 1817 Ph D University of Leeds Archived from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2015 01 19 David Groom 10 July 2010 The Identification of British 20th Century Silver Coin Varieties Lulu com p 44 ISBN 978 1 4457 5301 0 Archived from the original on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 6 October 2016 self published source The Numismatist American Numismatic Association 1972 Christopher Edgar Challis 1992 A New History of the Royal Mint Cambridge University Press p 583 ISBN 978 0 521 24026 0 The Bankers Magazine Waterlow 1855 p 139 Zupko Ronald Edward 1990 Revolution in Measurement Western European Weights and Measures Since the Age of Science Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society Vol 186 pp 242 245 ISBN 0 87169 186 8 The Story of Decimalisation Royal Mint Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 6 October 2014 Henry Noel Humphreys 1853 The Coin Collector s Manual Or Guide to the Numismatic Student in the Formation of a Cabinet of Coins Comprising an Historical and Critical Account of the Origin and Progress of Coinage from the Earliest Period to the Fall of the Roman Empire Bohn p 682 a b Shilling Coins of the UK Archived from the original on 30 December 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Moriesson Lieut Colonel H W 1907 The Silver Coins of James I PDF British Numismatic Journal 4 165 180 Archived PDF from the original on 2014 11 10 Retrieved 2015 01 19 Hammered coin inscriptions and their meanings Paul Shields Archived from the original on 9 October 2016 Retrieved 29 September 2016 Sessions Papers of the Old Bailey for 3 June 1789 quoted in bob n 8 Oxford English Dictionary 2 ed Oxford England Oxford University Press 1989 The Gambia Archived 2008 09 12 at the Wayback Machine eBizguides The Rough Guide to the Gambia Archived 2016 10 11 at the Wayback Machine p 65 Emma Gregg and Richard Trillo Rough Guides 2003 The King s Shilling BBC History Fact files BBC 2005 01 28 Archived from the original on 2020 11 26 Retrieved 2009 03 30 Dictionary of Phrase and Fable Archived 2016 10 01 at the Wayback Machine E Cobham Brewer 1898 Gerald Kennedy 1959 A Second Reader s Notebook New York Harper amp Brothers Club Online Coin Shilling Coin Type from United Kingdom Online Coin Club Archived from the original on 2021 10 25 Retrieved 2021 11 04 External links editOnline Coin Club Coin Type Shilling Listing of all issued shillings with mintages descriptions and photos Portals nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics nbsp United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shilling British coin amp oldid 1193736568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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