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Pound (currency): Difference between revisions

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The same £ symbol was used in [[Italy]] and the [[Republic of Ireland]] for the cognate [[lira]] and the [[Irish pound]] respectively, before the euro was introduced in these countries (although in recent times the official symbol for the [[Italy|Italian]] [[lira]] has been a capital L).
The same £ symbol was used in [[Italy]] and the [[Republic of Ireland]] for the cognate [[lira]] and the [[Irish pound]] respectively, before the euro was introduced in these countries (although in recent times the official symbol for the [[Italy|Italian]] [[lira]] has been a capital L).

In the beginning, a pound in money was the value of a [[pound]] weight of [[silver]].


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 21:24, 9 June 2005

As a unit of currency, the term pound originates from the value of a Troy pound weight (Latin libra), of high purity silver, and is the currency unit of a number of countries:

Pound is also the name for the former currency of the Republic of Ireland, the Irish pound. This currency was first issued under the name Saorstát pound in 1928 and maintained a fixed 1:1 exchange rate with sterling until 1979. The currency was replaced by the euro in 1999. There were also historic currencies called the Australian pound, New Zealand pound and South African pound.

The symbol for the pound, particularly with respect to the pound sterling legal tender in the UK and pegged to the pounds of her possessions, is a script capital letter L pierced horizontally with an endash or an equal: £.

The same £ symbol was used in Italy and the Republic of Ireland for the cognate lira and the Irish pound respectively, before the euro was introduced in these countries (although in recent times the official symbol for the Italian lira has been a capital L).

See also