In the
United Kingdom, a 'shilling' was a coin used before
decimalisation in 1971. A 'shilling' had a value of 12d (
old pence), and was equal to 1/20th of a
pound: there were 240 (old) pence to the pound.
The shilling was superseded by the
new five pence piece, which initially was of identical size and weight.
The abbreviation for shilling is "s", from the Latin ''
solidus,'' the name of a
Roman coin. Often it was written informally or printed with a
slash, ''e.g.,'' 1/6d as 1 shilling and sixpence (often pronounced "one and six"), or when there were no pence with a slash then a hyphen, ''e.g.,'' "11/-". Quite often a triangular shape or (
sans serif)
apostrophe would be used to give a neater appearance, ''e.g.,'' "1'6" and "11'-".

1956 Elizabeth II British shilling showing English and Scottish reverses
History
The 'scilling' was an accounting term that dates back to
Anglo-Saxon times, where it was deemed to be the value of a cow in Kent, or a sheep elsewhere.
During the reign of
Henry VII, the forerunner of the shilling, the testoon, was introduced. This coin was only produced in extremely small quantities, probably around 1489, and the fact that there are only 3 known dies for this issue (and 3 subsequent legend varieties, (HENRIC, HENRIC VII and HENRIC SEPTIM)) states clearly that the coins were not made for general circulation. They were made at the same time as the trials for the Profile issue of
Groats and Half-Groats, so they were probably trial pieces or patterns.
The testoon was really struck in quantity during the end of the reign of
Henry VIII, with The Tower, Southwark and Bristol producing testoons in 1544-1551. These testoons were made in the very poor base silver, as all coins of this period. The coins were struck after Henry's death in 1547, at
The Tower and at
Southwark, and possibly at
Bristol too.
Mint-marks are as follows:
★ TOWER (London)
★ two lis OR
★ lis OR
★ pellet in annulet
Southark
★ S OR
★ E
Bristol
★ WS
The coins from Southwark will have the reverse legend "CIVITAS LONDON" (City of London) and the Bristol coins will have the legend "CIVITAS BRISTOLLIE"
The obverse shows a facing bust of Henry VIII and the reverse shows a crowned rose.
BASE ISSUE
Henry VIII's young son
Edward VI continued the issues of base testoons. In his reign the testoons were called shillings for the first time, and the coins show the bust of the young boy. Unlike his father's coins, you cannot identify the shillings of Edward VI from the reverse legend. There are 6 slightly different busts for these issues. Most importantly, these coins are the first English ones to carry the date, which is in Roman numerals. The mints were Durham House, Tower, Southwark, Canterbury and Bristol.
MDXLVIII (1548)
Durham House
★ BOW
This issue is exceedingly rare and could be a pattern or contemporary forgery.
MDXLIX (1549)
Durham House
★ BOW
Tower
★ ARROW OR
★ GRAPPLE OR
★ PHEON OR
★ SWAN
Southwark
★ Y OR
★ EY
Canterbury
★ ROSE OR
★ T
Bristol
★ TC
MDL (1550)
Tower
★ LION OR
★ LIS OR
★ PHEON AND
★ SWAN OR
★ MARLET OR
★ CROWNED LEOPARD'S HEAD
Southark
★ Y OR
★ LIS AND Y
MDLI (1551)
Tower
★ LION AND ROSE OR
★ ROSE AND ROSE
Southwark
★ Y AND LIS
Undated issue (Durham House)
BOW
FINE SILVER ISSUE
In 1551 the silver standard was restored from about 0.250 silver to the normal 0.925 "sterling" silver. The issue has a stunning facing bust of the king and is very highly collectible. It was struck in large quantity, but is normally found fairly worn and sometimes holed.
Mint-marks
Tower
No date (1551)
★ Y
No date (1551-3)
★ TUN
No shillings were struck in England before Queen
Mary was married in 1554. (Irish shillings with Mary's portrait were struck in 1553 and 1554 before her marriage to
Philip of Spain.)
After Mary's marriage with Philip of Spain some shillings were coined. To boost his popularity his bust was placed on these coins, facing Mary's. These coins are fairly rare, but do frequently appear on the market. There are two main varieties, Spanish titles (which adds on Prince and Princess of Spain) and English titles. Many of these coins were dated using Arabic dates, and some coins have a mark of value (I__II) above the royal shield. There is an exceedingly rare variety which has the date under the busts. All the coins were made at the Tower mint.
One of the first events of
Elizabeth I's reign was the counter-marking of the Edward VI shillings to revalue them to their true worth. These coins have the counter-mark of a Portcullis or Greyhound on and are extremely rare. The coins with the portcullis counter-mark were revalued at fourpence halfpenny, and the coins with the Greyhound were revalued at Twopence Farthing.
A major recoinage was then embarked on, with thousands of silver coins being produced. The shilling was no exception, but the date was removed from the design. Luckily we can use mint-marks to reveal the date. No shillings were produced between 1562-82, but the next issue was also very large and a good amount has survived for collectors.
Mint-marks
HAMMERED ISSUE
All coins were produced in the Tower
★ Lis (1559-1560)
★ Cross crosslet (1560-61)
★ Marlet (1560-61)
★ Bell (1582-83)
★ A (1582-84)
★ Escallop (1584-86)
★ Crescent (1587-89)
★ Hand (1590-92)
★ Tun (1592-95)
★ Woolpack (1594-96)
★ Key (1595-98)
★ Anchor (1597-1600)
★ 1 (1601)
★ 2 (1602)
MILLED ISSUE
Tower mint only
★ Star (1560-1)
The milled issue was produced by Eloye Mestrelle using horsepower. The issues were a success, especially the sixpences, but he lost his post over various disputes with the mint-workers. Although Eloye found it very difficult to make smaller coins the sixpences and shillings were made in fairly large quantities. The shillings still tend to be much rarer than sixpences and are often found weakly struck, gilded, holed, mounted etc. They are still available to collectors, albeit in poor condition.
James I's coinage continued in much the same way as Elizabeth's one, but the coins have a mark of value (XII) in front of the bust. Some shillings were struck with a plume above the shield (Welsh silver).
First coinage (Reverse legend ''Exurgat deus dissipentur inimici'')
★ Lis (1603-4)
★ Thistle (1603-4)
Second coinage (Reverse legend ''Quae deus coniunxit nemo seperat'', square cut beard)
★ Lis (1604-5)
★ Rose (1604-6)
★ Escallop (1606-7)
★ Grapes (1607)
★ Coronet (1607-9)
★ Key (1609-10)
★ Mullet (1611-2)
★ Tower (1612-3)
★ Trefoil (1613)
★ Tun (1613-5)
★ Cinquefoil (1613-5)
★ Closed book (1615-6)
★ Plain cross (1617-18)
Third coinage (Very long curly hair )
★ Spur Rowel (1619-20)
★ Rose (1620-1)
★ Thistle (1621-3)
★ Lis (1623-4)
★ Trefoil (1624
WELSH issues, with plume above shield
★ Thistle (1621-3)
★ Lis (1623-4)
★ Trefoil (1624)
With the exception of
Mary I shillings were minted in every subsequent reign as well as during the
Commonwealth period. Until the reign of
Edward VII monarchs typically issued a wide variety of design types. During the early part of the reign of
George III very few shillings (like other silver coins) were struck, although there was a large issue in 1787. In 1763 coins were issued by the
Earl of Northumberland to commemorate his ascension. This issue is now very rare, but the contemporary rumour that the issue limit was £100 (2000 pieces) is probably untrue. In 1787 the hearts were left out from the Hanoverian shield in error, but it was so minor that it took some time for them to notice and correct it, so both types are of similar value. In 1798 Mr Doriens Magens struck an issue of shillings in excess of 10,000 pieces, but it was stated to be illegal so the coins were reclaimed and melted down. There are currently about 4 in existence and an example would be worth over £10,000 in any condition.
After the Great Recoinage of England's money in 1816 the shilling was standardized with a weight of 5.7 grams and a diameter of 24 mm. In 1920, along with other national coins, the
silver content was reduced from 92.5% (
sterling) to 50%, and in 1947 to pure cupro-nickel.
The shilling coin issued in most of the 20th century was virtually identical in size and weight to the German 1
Deutsche Mark coin (sufficiently similar to be interchangeable in coin-operated machines). This reflected the pre-First World War exchange rate of 20 marks to one pound; by the end of the shilling's circulation, the mark was worth six times as much.
During the reign of
Elizabeth II, shillings were minted featuring both the English ''three lions'' (technically ''three leopards couchants'') coat of arms, and the Scottish ''lion rampant'' coat of arms (see illustration above).
Withdrawal
The last shillings issued for circulation were dated 1966, although proofs were issued as part of a
collectors' set dated 1970. In 1968, new
decimal coins, "
five new pence" with the same weight and specifications, started to replace shillings. Shillings remained in circulation alongside the 5p coins until 1990, when a new, smaller, 5p coin was produced.
References in popular culture
A slang name for a shilling was a "bob" (which was invariant in the plural, as in "that cost me two bob"). In The Gambia, white people are called ' tuobabs', supposedly from the price of a slave which was 2 shillings.
To "take the King's shilling" was to enlist in the army or navy, a phrase dating back to the early 19th century; specifically in the context of kissing the image of the sovereign in general, a shilling being a convenient object carrying the likeness. Supposedly the practice of
press gangs whereby they would drop a shilling into a
tankard, and thus trick the unwary patron to touch his lips to the shilling, supposedly enough to submit to conscription, led to the development of glass bottomed tankards. In a modern context, to say someone has "taken the King's shilling" implies in a derogatory way that they are in the pocket (or employment) of another.
To "cut someone off without a shilling" (or "with a shilling", that is, with no more than a shilling) means to disinherit.
Irish shillings

Irish shilling 1954
''See also:
Irish shilling coin''
In the
Republic of Ireland, the shilling was issued as "scilling" in
Irish language. They had kept the original 12d value on their shilling. It was issued until 1969, and after 1971, like the United Kingdom, the general public often used a shilling to pay 5p to shops, etc. When the
Central Bank of Ireland issued a smaller 5p piece, the shilling was withdrawn in 1992. They remain, like all obsolete Irish coinage, redeemable at the Central Bank.
Australian shillings
Australian shillings, twenty of which made up one
Australian pound, were first issued in
1910, with the Australian
coat of arms on the reverse and King
Edward VII on the face. The coat of arms design was retained through the reign of King
George V until a new ram's head design was introduced for the coins of King
George VI. This design continued until the last year of issue in 1963. In 1966 Australia's currency was decimalised and the shilling was replaced by a
ten cent coin (Australian), where 10 shillings made up one
Australian dollar.
The slang term for a shilling coin in Australia was "deener". The slang term for a shilling as currency unit was "bob", the same as in the United Kingdom.
East African shillings
The
East African shilling was in use in the
British colonies and
protectorates of
British Somaliland,
Kenya,
Tanganyika,
Uganda and
Zanzibar from 1920, when it replaced the
rupee, until after those countries became independent, and in
Tanzania after that country was formed by the merger of Tanganyika and Zanzibar in 1964. Upon independence in 1960, the East African shilling in the Northern Region of
Somalia (former British Somaliland) and the Somali Somalo in the Southern Region (former
Italian Somaliland) were replaced by the
Somali Shilling.
[1] In 1966 the East African Monetary Union broke up, and the member countries replaced their currencies with the
Kenyan shilling, the
Ugandan shilling and the
Tanzanian shilling respectively.
[2] Though all these currencies have different values at present, there are plans to reintroduce the
East African shilling as a new common currency by 2009.
[3]
Other countries' shillings
Shillings were also issued in
Australia and
New Zealand before
decimalisation in the 1960s, in
Austria ''(
Schilling)'' until the advent of the
Euro, in the Scandinavian countries ''(skilding)'' until the
Scandinavian Monetary Union of 1873, and in the city of
Hamburg, Germany.
The ''Sol'' (later the ''sou''), both also derived from the Roman
solidus, were the equivalent coins in
France, while the (nuevo)
sol (PEN) remains the currency of
Peru. As in France, the Peruvian sol was originally named after the Roman solidus, but the name of the Peruvian currency is now much more closely linked to the Spanish word for the sun (''sol''). This helps explain the name of its temporary replacement, the
inti, named for the Incan sun god.
Shillings were also used in
Malta, prior to
decimalization in 1972, and had a face value of five Maltese
cents.
Other countries that were in the British Empire still use the term ''shilling'' or the local variant (Shillin) informally as a unit of currency among the local populace.
In
Vanuatu and
Solomon Islands, the word "selen" (shilling) is used in
Bislama and
Pijin to mean "money" and in
Egypt and
Jordan the Shillin
Arabic: (شلن) is equal to 1/20th of the
Egyptian pound or the
Jordanian dinar. In the United States during colonial times, British money was used, and we often see references to shillings in early American literature.
See also
★
Austrian schilling
★
Australian coins
★
British coinage
References
1. Description of Somalia shilling - URL retrieved October 8, 2006
2. Dissolution of the East African Monetary Union - URL retrieved October 8, 2006
3. East African Business Council - Fact Sheet: Customs Union - URL Retrieved October 8, 2002
External links
★
The Shilling