Pound sterling
The pound sterling (GBP, sign: £) is the official currency used in the United Kingdom. It is also used in British overseas territories and the British Crown dependencies of the Isle of Man, Bailiwicks of Guernsey and Jersey. The pound is divided into 100 pence (singular: penny; plural: pence).
Today's coins are 1 penny, 2 pence, 5 pence, 10 pence, 20 pence, 50 pence, £1 and £2. The common banknotes are £5, £10, £20, and £50.
As of October 2022, one pound was equal to 1.11 United States dollars.[needs update][source?]
Etymology
[change | change source]A pound coin originally weighed one troy pound of sterling silver, giving the currency the name "pound sterling". "Sterling silver" means mixed metal that has 92.5% or more real silver. One pound sterling was originally divided by 240 sterling pence. This was because there are 240 pennyweights in a troy pound. So a single one–pound coin weighed one troy pound (about 373 grams) and a single 1–penny coin weighed one pennyweight (about. 1.5 gram).
The Latin word for "pound" is libra. The £ or ₤ is a stylised writing of the letter L, a short way of writing libra. This is similar to how a pound of mass is abbreviated "lb". Up until around the 1970s, especially on typewriters or keyboards without a "£" symbol, it was common to write "L" instead of "£".
The symbol for pennies is p. The British write 50p or £0.50 and say it "fifty pence" or simply "fifty pee"
The old system
[change | change source]The pound has only been divided into 100 pence since 1971. Before this time it was divided into 20 shillings. Each shilling was divided into 12 pennies.
The symbols for shilling and penny came from Roman coins: "s" for shilling (from the Latin word solidus) and "d" for penny (from the Latin denarius). The penny was divided into 4 farthings. The farthing became obsolete (was no longer used) in 1961 because it was worth so little.
Coins just before the change in 1971 were: 1/2d (ha'penny), 1d (one penny), 3d (threepence; the coin was called a "thrup'ny bit"); 6d (sixpence); 1s (one shilling, also called one "bob"); 2s (a florin); 2s6d (half a crown; the crown, 5s (a quarter of a pound sterling), was not used in modern times).
How prices were written and pronounced in the old system:
- ½d (half a penny) was pronounced "haypenny" (spelt: ha'penny or halfpenny)
- 2d (two old pennies) was always pronounced "tuppence"
- 3d (three old pennies) was always pronounced "thrupence" or "thruppenny bit" for the 3d coin" (spelt threepence)
- One shilling was written "1/–" (sometimes called a "bob").
- Prices in shillings and pence were pronounced like this: 2/6 (or: 2s6d) "two and six" (or: "two shillings and sixpence").
- The price £4 6s 3¾d was pronounced: "four pounds six shillings and thruppence three-farthings"
There was also a guinea. Originally the guinea was a gold coin. Although the coin had not been minted or circulated for a long time, prices were still sometimes given in guineas. A guinea was 21s (or £1 1s 0d). A price of 58 guineas was, in fact, £60 18s 0d, which sounds more than "58 guineas".
Coins
[change | change source](Following the Great Recoinage of 1816)
Units | Pence | Shillings | Pounds |
---|---|---|---|
Quarter Farthing | 1⁄16d | 1⁄192/- | £1⁄3,840 |
Third Farthing | 1⁄12d | 1⁄144/- | £1⁄2,880 |
Half Farthing | 1⁄8d | 1⁄96/- | £1⁄1,920 |
Farthing | 1⁄4d | 1⁄48/- | £1⁄960 |
Halfpenny | 1⁄2d | 1⁄24/- | £1⁄480 |
Penny | 1d | 1⁄12/- | £1⁄240 |
Threepence | 3d | 1⁄4/- | £1⁄80 |
Groat | 4d | 1⁄3/- | £1⁄60 |
Sixpence | 6d | 1⁄2/- | £1⁄40 |
Shilling | 12d | 1/- | £1⁄20 |
Florin | 24d | 2/- | £1⁄10 |
Half Crown | 30d | 2/6 | £1⁄8 |
Double Florin | 48d | 4/- | £1⁄5 |
Crown | 60d | 5/- | £1⁄4 |
Half Sovereign | 120d | 10/- | £1⁄2 |
Sovereign | 240d | 20/- | £1 |
Double Sovereign | 480d | 40/- | £2 |
Quintuple Sovereign | 1,200d | 100/- | £5 |
Notes
[change | change source](Following the Great Coinage of 1816)
Units | Pence | Shillings | Pounds |
---|---|---|---|
Ten Shilling Note | 120d | 10/- | 1⁄2 |
One Pound Note | 240d | 20/- | £1 |
Two Pound Note | 480d | 40/- | £2 |
Five Pound Note | 1,200d | 120/- | £5 |
Ten Pound Note | 2,400d | 200/- | £10 |
Fifteen Pound Note | 3,600d | 320/- | £15 |
Twenty Pound Note | 4,800d | 400/- | £20 |
Twenty Five Pound Note | 6,000d | 520/- | £25 |
Thirty Pound Note | 7,200d | 600/- | £30 |
Forty Pound Note | 9.600d | 800/- | £40 |
Fifty Pound Note | 12,000d | 1000/- | £50 |
One Hundred Pound Note | 24,000d | 2000/- | £100 |
Two Hundred Pound Note | 48,000d | 4000/- | £200 |
Three Hundred Pound Note | 72,000d | 6000/- | £300 |
Five Hundred Pound Note | 120,000d | 10,000/- | £500 |
One Thousand Pound Note | 240,000d | 20,000/- | £1,000 |
Decimalisation
[change | change source]In circulation before 1971 were the halfpenny, penny, threepence, sixpence, shilling, florin, crown, sovereign, ten shilling note, and the one, five, 10, 20 and 50 pound notes.
The crown and sovereign were legal currency before 1971. By then they were commemorative coins and not commonly found in circulation. They are both still legal currency at a value of 25 pence and £1 respectively.
In 1971, the pound sterling of the United Kingdom and the Irish Pound of Ireland were decimalised (divided into 100). Most coins were de-monetised. £1 was equal to 100 pence after then. One shilling became 5 pence, remaining 1⁄20 of £1. £1 stayed the same.
Decimal currency
[change | change source]Units | Value | Mintage | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Halfpenny | 1/2p | 1971–1984 | No Longer Legal Tender |
Penny | 1p | 1971–present | |
Two Pence | 2p | 1971–present | |
Five Pence | 5p | 1968–present | Equal to Shilling (1s) |
Ten Pence | 10p | 1968–present | Equal to Florin (2s) |
Twenty Pence | 20p | 1982–present | Equal to Double Florin (4s) |
Fifty Pence | 50p | 1969–present | Equal to Half Sovereign (10s) |
One Pound | £1 | 1983–present | Equal to Sovereign (£1) |
Two Pounds | £2 | 1988–present | Equal to Double Sovereign (£2) |
Notes | Value |
---|---|
Five Pounds Note | £5 |
Ten Pounds Note | £10 |
Twenty Pounds Note | £20 |
Fifty Pounds Note | £50 |