Coin Guinea: Coin of approximately one quarter ounce of gold that was minted in Great Britain between 1663 and 1814

A guinea is a coin that was minted in the Kingdom of England between 1663 and 1813.

It is not used any more. The gold used to mint the first guineas was mined in the region of the same name in Africa.

Although guinea coins had not been made for a long time, prices often continued to be shown in guineas until British prices became decimal in 1971. A guinea was worth £1,1s (one pound and one shilling). This is the same as £1.05 in modern money.

Because a guinea was close to a pound, putting prices in guineas made the price seem less. A price of 39 guineas might look like "about £39". In fact it is nearly £41. Prices in guineas were traditionally used for luxury goods before decimalisation. Savile Row tailors, bespoke boot makers, fine jewellers, and expensive motorcars were always priced in guineas.

Guineas are still used as the currency in the United Kingdom in the purchasing of Cows and horses at bloodstock sales, such as foals,etc.


Tags:

CoinKingdom of England

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki Simple English:

BangladeshKrishnadevarayaLahoreSamantha Ruth Prabhu12 (number)List of Jupiter's moonsDreamcastJeff SaturSKSJohn Cena3 (number)Emma WatsonWiki FoundationGuardians of the Galaxy (movie)HarmoniumDattatreyaTheologySeppukuBharatiya Janata Party20th centuryKalki 2898 ADMia KhalifaBear (gay slang)List of best-selling albums worldwideNathuram GodseRamaLawrence WongAnno DominiMammary intercoursePhantom of HeilbronnVishnuPortia UmanskyTurkish alphabetJodha AkbarMarilyn MonroePlanck timeWe the People PartyMobile phoneElon MuskPortugalList of political parties in the United KingdomThe quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dogDEFCONAprilSixpence None the RicherKGBJapanOral sex13 (number)Historical race conceptsBismillahir Rahmanir RaheemYouTubeTeenagerShaquille O'NealFA CupFeijoaTheta7 UpDonald SutherlandAbaloneTesla (unit)Urvashi RautelaConstitutional republicVelupillai PrabhakaranJesusAir fryerBruno MarsDemocratic Party (United States)ChristianityHarry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (movie)HexadecimalPicometre🡆 More