The
old pound had the value of one pound of sterling silver and was divided into 20
shillings or 240 pennies. At one time, the old penny weighed 240th
of a pound. Each shilling had 12
pennies. The symbols for each were: £ for the pound, s for the shilling and d
for the penny.
In
old literature, we see references to other values such as crowns, florins, and
guineas. They equaled five shillings, two shillings and one pound plus one
shilling (£1 1s), respectively.
I
think it is best to learn how small combinations were written because that is
what you will find in parish rate books.
£12
10s 6d was the notation for twelve pounds, 10 shillings and 6 pennies. It was
commonly written as £12-10-6.
10s-6d
was also written 10/6 and pronounced ‘10 and 6.’
10/
meant ten shillings (half a pound).
On
15 February 1971, British money went to the decimal system and one pound was divided
into 100 pennies or pence. The shillings were retired.
Online
you can find more information at:www.victorianweb.org/economics/currency.html