Early Accounting: Pounds, Shillings, Pennies and Marks
- Written by: Gary Howes
-
Early Accounting: Pounds, Shillings, Pennies and Marks
Welcome to the third article in a series of insights into the fascinating past of the UK currency. Here we dwell on the accounting behind the Pound at the time of its formation around 1080 - 1100.
There were 240d (12x20) that could be attained from one pound of metal.
(Remember, 'sterling' really was a silver metal, thus one could physically split the currency into smaller units of currency).
The shilling (s.) - a word we derive from the latin Solidus (a solid coin) - meant 12 pennies.
A halfpenny (farthing) was derived by cutting a penny into halves or quarters.
A mark was two-thirds of a pound. It was both a unit of weight and a unit of accounting and was worth 160d.
- one pound (£) = 20 shillings (s.) = 240 pennies (d.)
- one mark = 13.33 shillings = 160 pennies = 13s. 4d.
Courtesy of Nicolas Mayhew's book Sterling, The History of a Currency.
Nicolas Mayhew is Keeper of the Heberden Coin Room at the Ashmolean Museum and a fellow of the St Cross College, Oxford.