List of British banknotes and coins, with commonly used terms.
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Prior to decimalisation in 1971, there were 12 pence (written as 12d) in a shilling (written as 1s or 1/-) and 20 shillings in a pound, written as £1 (occasionally "L" was used instead of the pound sign, £). There were therefore 240 pence in a pound. For example, 2 pounds 14 shillings and five pence could have been written as £2 14s 5d or 2/14/5.
The value of some coins fluctuated, particularly in the reigns of James I and Charles I. The value of a guinea fluctuated between 20 and 30 shillings before being fixed at 21 shillings in December 1717. These are denominations of British, or earlier English, coins – Scottish coins had different values.
Name | Pre-decimalisation value | Post-decimalisation value | Dates of use | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mite[1] | ¹/24d | £0.0001736 | Tudor dates. | One mite was one twenty-fourth of a penny or one sixth of a farthing. |
Quarter farthing | ¹/16d | £0.00026 | 1839–1868. | see note 1 below |
Third farthing | ¹/12d | £0.0003472 | 1827–1913. | see note 1 below |
Half farthing | ¹/8d | £0.00052083 | 1828–1868. | see note 1 below |
Farthing | ¼d | £0.00104167 | c. 1200–1960. | The word "farthing" means "fourth part" (of a penny). |
Halfpenny | ½d | £0.0021 | 1272–1969. | Often called a "ha'penny" (pronounced HAY-p'nee), plural halfpennies ("ha'pennies") for the coins, halfpence ("ha'pence") for the monetary amount. |
Three farthings | ¾d | £0.0031 | 1561–1582. | |
One penny | 1d | £0.0042 | 757–1970. | Commonly called a "copper"; plural "pennies" for the coins, "pence" for the monetary amount |
Three halfpence | 1½d | £0.0063 | 1561–1582, 1834–1870. | see note 1 below. Pronounced as "three-ha'pence" |
Half groat | 2d | £0.0083 | 1351–1662. | |
Twopence | 2d | £0.0083 | silver (inc. Maundy) 1668–current; copper 1797–1798. | Pronounced "tuppence". |
Threepence | 3d | £0.0125 | silver 1547–1945 (and thereafter only for Maundy), nickel-brass 1937–1970. | Sometimes called "thripp'nce", "thrupp'nce", "threpp'nce" or "thripp'ny bit", "thrupp'ny bit". |
Groat | 4d | £0.0167 | silver 1279–1662, 1836–1862 (and thereafter only for Maundy). | Sometimes referred to as a "joey" after Joseph Hume, the economist and Member of Parliament.[2] |
Sixpence | 6d | £0.025 | 1547–1970; circulated from 1971 to 1980 with a value of two and a half decimal pence. | Also called "tanner", sometimes "tilbury",[3] or "joey" after the groat was no longer in circulation. |
Shilling | 1/- | £0.05 | 1502–1970, circulated from 1971 to 1990 with a value of five decimal pence. | Also called a "bob". |
Quarter florin or helm | 1/6 | £0.075 | 1344 | Gold coin demonetized within one year. see note 2 below |
Gold penny | 1/8 to 2/- | £0.0833 to £0.1 | 1257–1265. | Gold. Undervalued for its metal content and extremely rare. |
Quarter noble | 1/8 | £0.0833 | 1344–1470. | |
Quarter angel | 2/- | £0.1 | 1547–1600. | Gold. |
Florin or two shillings | 2/- | £0.1 | 1848–1970, circulated from 1971 to 1993 with a value of ten decimal pence. | see note 2 below |
Half crown | 2/6 | £0.125 | 1526–1969. | Sometimes known as "half a dollar" (see Crown below). |
Half florin or leopard | 3/- | £0.15 | 1344 | Gold; extremely rare. see note 2 below |
Half noble | 3/4 to 4/2 | £0.1667 to £0.2083 | minted 1346–1438. | increased in value in 1464 |
Half angel | 3/4, later 5/6 | £0.1667, later £0.275 | 1470–1619. | |
Double florin | 4/- | £0.2 | 1887–1890. | Silver. see note 2 below |
Crown of the rose | 4/6 | £0.225 | 1526–1551. | |
Crown | 5/- | £0.25 | 1526–1965. | Sometimes known as "a dollar" – from the 1940s when the exchange rate was four USD to the GBP. |
Quarter guinea | 5/3 | £0.2625 | 1718, 1762. | |
Florin or double leopard | 6/- | £0.3 | 1344. | Gold; demonetized within one year. see note 2 below |
Noble | 6/8, later 8/4 | £0.3333, later £0.4167 | 1344–1464. | Increased in value in 1464. |
Angel | 6/8 | £0.3333 | 1461–1643. | |
Half mark | 6/8 | £0.333 | [medieval period] | A unit of account, not a coin. |
Third guinea | 7/- | £0.35 | 1797–1813. | |
Rose noble or ryal | 10/-, later 15/- | £0.5, later £0.75 | 1464–1470, 1487, 1553–1603. | Increased in value from 1553. |
Half sovereign | 10/- | £0.5 | 1544–1553; 1603–1604; 1817–1937 | A bullion coin since 1980. |
Halfpound | 10/- | £0.5 | 1559–1602; 1642–1644 | |
Double crown | 10/- | £0.5 | 1604–1619; 1625–1662. | |
Half laurel | 10/- | £0.5 | 1619–1625. | |
Half unite | 10/- | £0.5 | 1642–1643. | |
Half guinea | 10/6 | £0.525 | 1669–1813. | |
Mark | 13/4 | £0.667 | [medieval period] | A unit of account not a coin, but widely used. |
Spur ryal | 15/- | £0.75 | 1604–1625. | |
Sovereign | 20/- | £1 | 1489–1604; 1817–1937 | A bullion coin since 1957. |
Unite | 20/- | £1 | 1604–1619; 1649–1662. | |
Laurel | 20/- | £1 | 1619–1644? | |
Carolus | 20/-, later 23/- | £1, later £1.15 | reign of Charles I. | |
Broad | 20/- | £1 | 1656. | |
Guinea | 21/- | £1.05 | 1663–1799, 1813. | |
Rose Ryal | 30/- | £1.5 | 1604–1625. | |
Two pounds | 40/- | £2 | 1823–1937. | |
Two guineas or double guinea | originally 40/-, later 42/- | originally £2, later £2.1 | 1664–1753. | Originally known as a "forty-shilling piece"; value changed to forty-two shillings after the Proclamation of 1717 finally settled the value of a guinea. |
Fifty shillings | 50/- | £2.5 | 1656. | |
Triple unite | 60/- | £3 | 1642–1644. | |
Five pounds | 100/- | £5 | 1826–1990. | Gold. |
Five guineas | originally 100/-, later 105/- | originally £5, later £5.25 | 1668–1753. | Originally known and valued as five pounds, but became five guineas when the guinea was standardised at one pound and one shilling in 1717. |
Notes:
Since decimalisation on "Decimal Day" in 1971, the pound has been divided into 100 pence. Originally the term "new pence" was used; the word "new" was dropped from the coinage in 1982. The old shilling equated to five (new) pence, and, for example, £2 10s 6d became £2.52½. The symbol for the (old) penny, "d", was replaced by "p" (or initially sometimes "np", for new pence). Thus 72 pence can be written as £0.72 or 72p; both would commonly be read as "seventy-two pee".
Name | Value | Notes |
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Half penny | 1⁄2p | Sometimes written "ha'penny" (pronounced HAY-p'nee), but normally called a "half-pee"; demonetised and withdrawn from circulation in December 1984. |
One penny | 1p | |
Two pence | 2p | |
Five pence | 5p | A direct replacement for the shilling. In 1990 it was reduced in size. |
Ten pence | 10p | A replacement for the florin (two shillings). It was reduced in size in 1992. |
Twenty pence | 20p | Introduced in 1982. |
Twenty-five pence | 25p or "crown". | A commemorative coin issued between 1972 and 1981 as a post-decimal continuation of the old crown. From 1990 it was replaced in the commemorative role by the £5 coin. |
Fifty pence | 50p | Introduced in 1969, just prior to decimalisation, to replace the ten shilling note ("ten bob note"). It was initially sometimes called a "ten bob bit". The coin was reduced in size in 1997. |
One pound | £1 | Introduced in 1983 to replace the one pound note. |
Two pounds | £2 | Issued as a commemorative coin from 1986 and in general circulation from 1997. |
Five pounds | £5 or "crown". | Introduced in 1990 as a commemorative coin, replacing the commemorative role of the twenty-five pence coin. |
Britannia, sovereign and half sovereign | Bullion coins issued to various values. |
Note: The description of banknotes given here relates to notes issued by the Bank of England. Three banks in Scotland and four banks in Northern Ireland also issue notes, in some or all of the denominations: £1, £5, £10, £20, £50, £100.
Name | Value | Circulation | Notes |
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Ten shilling note | 10/- (£0.5) | Issued from World War I until 1969.[4] | Commonly "ten bob note" or "half a quid" |
£1 note | £1 | Bank of England in 1988 (but still issued by the Royal Bank of Scotland). Also still used in some of the Channel Islands. | Withdrawn by the|
£5 note | £5 | in circulation | The original "large white fiver" five pound note was known as "five jacks" and replaced in 1957 by the blue £5 note. |
£10 note | £10 | in circulation | |
£20 note | £20 | in circulation | |
£50 note | £50 | in circulation | Also known as a bullseye. |
£1,000,000 & £100,000,000 notes | £1,000,000 and £100,000,000 | non-circulating | Used as backing for banknotes issued by Scottish & Northern Irish banks when exceeding the value of their 1845 reserves. The amount to be covered is over a billion pounds.[5] |
Bank of England notes are periodically redesigned and reissued, with the old notes being withdrawn from circulation and destroyed. Each redesign is allocated a "Series". Currently, the £50 note is Series E issue, the £5 and £10 notes are Series E Revised issue and the £20 note is Series F issue. Series F is the latest round of redesign, which commenced in March 2007. The £5, £10 and £50 notes will undergo this process in the near future.[6]
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