Penny (British pre-decimal coin)
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The penny of the Kingdom of Great Britain and later of the United Kingdom, was in circulation from the early 18th century until February 1971, Decimal Day.
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[edit] History
Pre-decimal penny coins continue to be used to adjust the timing of the pendulum of the clock in the Clock Tower of the Palace of Westminster, commonly known as "Big Ben".
In the United States, other than the known uses in numismatics, British Pennies are also used in coin magic, because they are at contrast with the just slightly smaller US half dollar (the half dollar is 30.61 mm in diameter compared to the 31 mm in British Pennies), with their copper sheen compared to the silver in half dollars. Indeed, many routines involve a copper-silver transposition, in which a British Penny and a half dollar change places.
See also: British coinage
[edit] Pennies by period
- The Anglo-Saxons (c. 600–1066)
- The Early Normans and the Anarchy (1066–1154)
- The Plantagenets (1154–1485)
- The Tudors (1485–1603)
- The Stuarts and the Commonwealth (1603–1714)
- The Hanoverians (1714–1901)
- The Twentieth Century Penny (1901–1970)
- Decimal Day, 1971
- Post-decimalisation (1971–present)
[edit] Media
[edit] References
- Coincraft's Standard Catalogue English & UK Coins 1066 to Date, Richard Lobel, Coincraft. ISBN 0-9526228-8-2
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