Decoding English Money Denominations: A Guide to Pre-Decimal Currency

Before 1971, navigating English money was a unique experience. Unlike today’s decimal system, the currency was based on pounds, shillings, and pence, a structure that can seem quite complex to modern eyes. Understanding these pre-decimal denominations offers a fascinating glimpse into British history and its financial past.


Alt text: Historical engraving of a minting workshop, illustrating the production of pre-decimal English coins, from a 19th-century children’s educational book on arithmetic.

The fundamental units of this system were:

  • Pound (£): The largest unit.
  • Shilling (s): A subdivision of the pound.
  • Penny (d): A subdivision of the shilling.

Here’s how they related to each other:

  • One pound (£1) was equal to 20 shillings.
  • One shilling (1s) was equal to 12 pennies (12d).
  • One penny (1d) could be further divided into smaller units: two halfpennies or four farthings.

This meant there were a total of 240 pennies in a single pound, a stark contrast to the decimal system of 100 pence per pound we use today.

Common Abbreviations in Pre-Decimal Currency

To further understand historical texts and documents referencing money, it’s essential to recognize the common abbreviations used:

Abbreviation Meaning
£ Pound. Derived from the Latin word ‘libra’, meaning ‘pound weight’. The symbol evolved from an ornate capital ‘L’.
s Shilling. From ‘sesterius’ or ‘solidos’, Roman coins.
d Penny. From ‘denarius’, another Roman coin.
ob Halfpenny. Abbreviation of ‘obulus’, a smaller Roman coin, indicating half the value of a penny in Roman terms.
qua Farthing. Short for ‘quadrans’, meaning a quarter of a penny. ‘Farthing’ itself is Old English for ‘fourth-thing’, highlighting its fractional value of a penny.

Monetary amounts were recorded in various formats. Full amounts of pounds, shillings, and pence could be written as:

  • £1 9s 6d
  • £1.9.6
  • £1/9/6d
  • £1-9-6

Shillings and pence were often noted as:

  • 9s 6d
  • 9/6 (spoken as “nine and six”)

Shillings alone were represented as:

  • 9s
  • 9/- (the dash indicating zero pence)

Historically, particularly before the 17th century, lowercase Roman numerals were also used:

  • ixs vjd (representing 9 shillings and 6 pence)

Coins and Units of Pre-Decimal English Money

Beyond the basic units, various coins with specific names and values circulated. These denominations offer a richer understanding of everyday transactions in pre-decimal Britain:

Coin Amount
¼ d Farthing
½ d Halfpenny (‘haypny’ or ‘ha’penny’)
¾ d Three farthings
1d Penny
2d Two pennies / ‘tuppence’
3d Three pennies / ‘threepenny bit’ (‘thrupny’ or ‘thruppence’)
4d Groat (until 1662, briefly revived mid-19th century)
6d Sixpence / ‘tanner’
1s Shilling / ‘bob’
2s Two shillings / ‘florin’
2s 6d Half a crown
5s Crown
10s Ten shillings / ‘half sovereign’
£1 One pound / ‘sovereign’ / ‘quid’
£1 1s One pound and one shilling (21 shillings) / ‘guinea’

Notably, the ‘mark’, worth 13s 4d (two-thirds of a pound), was a unit of account but not a physical coin. It was frequently used for financial record-keeping.

The Shift to Decimalization

On February 15th, 1971, Britain adopted decimal currency. The pound (£) was retained as the main unit, but it was now divided into 100 pence (p). This transition redefined the value of the old denominations in decimal terms:

Old Currency Decimal Equivalent
6d 2½ p
1s 5p
2s 10p
10s 50p
£1 £1

Interestingly, some pre-decimal coins remained in circulation for a period after decimalization, representing their new decimal values. The sixpence, then worth 2½p, was withdrawn in 1980. Shilling and two-shilling coins, repurposed as 5p and 10p pieces, were phased out in 1990 and 1992, respectively. For about a decade post-decimalization, newly minted coins were marked ‘New Pence’ to differentiate them from the old pennies.

Understanding English Money Denominations before decimalization reveals a rich history and a system that, while complex, played a vital role in British commerce and daily life for centuries.

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