Predecimal Currency: The Nightmare in Your Pocket

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024
  • Ever wondered what a "shilling" actually was?
    Follow me: / _britmonkey
    Patreon: / britmonkey
    Merch: crowdmade.com/...
    Music: pastebin.com/7...
    (The fake coins are the Armani and the Denique)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @BritMonkey
    @BritMonkey  Місяць тому +239

    no idea why this video got 1 million views but thanks

    • @TheModeler99
      @TheModeler99 Місяць тому +22

      no idea why I got recommended this video in 2024 but thanks

    • @raymondg7565
      @raymondg7565 Місяць тому +3

      @@TheModeler99 Ditto

    • @Paul-of2yq
      @Paul-of2yq Місяць тому +1

      You’re not the only one 🤷🏼

    • @coffecrazy
      @coffecrazy Місяць тому +3

      Same

    • @DigitalZiggurat
      @DigitalZiggurat Місяць тому +3

      Its really interesting.

  • @glassesofficial
    @glassesofficial 2 роки тому +6056

    Cashier: “Your total comes out to a joey, a tanner and a bob.”
    Guy at checkout with his 3 sons: _”I’m sorry young ones.”_

    • @wontcreep
      @wontcreep 2 роки тому +264

      the crisis hitting hard

    • @michaelbaker7499
      @michaelbaker7499 2 роки тому +88

      It wouldn't be a bob, a tanner and a joey.
      Actually, it would be "1 and 9", "1 shilling and 9 pence" or "1 shilling and 9", depending on how they'd want to say it.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 2 роки тому +172

      "Three Bob"
      *Goes to a construction site*

    • @TheoHiggins
      @TheoHiggins 2 роки тому +34

      I can't imagine there'd be any tanners in 1960s Britain

    • @Eman-wj8gq
      @Eman-wj8gq 2 роки тому +6

      Haha

  • @p0stscripter249
    @p0stscripter249 Рік тому +1380

    My personal favourite example of this is in the very first episode of Doctor Who. Even before the change had been officially announced in the real world, the Doctor's granddaughter revealed herself as a time traveller when she forgot that the pound hadn't yet been decimalized in 1963. It's certainly aged better than some of their other predictions for the future.

    • @ayupmeduck5708
      @ayupmeduck5708 Рік тому +108

      It wasn't a prediction, decimalization was already on the books waiting to be introduced. Predictive programming by the BBC.

    • @Timeward76
      @Timeward76 11 місяців тому

      ​@@ayupmeduck57088 years?

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 11 місяців тому +67

      ​@@ayupmeduck5708you say it wasn't a prediction but was predictive. Sounds like the same thing.

    • @planescaped
      @planescaped 11 місяців тому +37

      @@Roddy556 Gotta love those yes but no but actually yes types...

    • @gae_wead_dad_6914
      @gae_wead_dad_6914 3 місяці тому +21

      @@Roddy556 The amazing logic of conspiracy theorists. Will make anything mundane into a conspiracy
      Have you seen the clouds today?

  • @nabollo
    @nabollo 3 роки тому +2993

    5:46 The £sd system isn’t from the medieval times!
    It’s actually from much longer ago, being based upon the roman Libra-Solidus-Dinarius system, which is why the abbreviation for pence is a d.

    • @cogspace
      @cogspace 3 роки тому +243

      It's also why the / symbol is called a "solidus" and was commonly used to represent shillings. Fun fact, the official Unicode name of the \ symbol is the "reverse solidus."

    • @comradecid
      @comradecid 3 роки тому +17

      thanks for this 👌

    • @Jootunn
      @Jootunn 3 роки тому +81

      TMW your country used the roman currency system for literal millenia. Nothing bad there, it worked for a long time.

    • @hrruben5135
      @hrruben5135 3 роки тому +78

      “which is why the abbreviation for pence is a d”
      Thank you, I was wondering why.

    • @forthrightgambitia1032
      @forthrightgambitia1032 3 роки тому +134

      No it *is* from early medieval times. More specifically the late 8th century early 9th century. The Roman system of coinage was quite different. They didn't have a 'libra' coin, it was a weight not a currency and the relative values of the coinages such as solidus or denarius were varied over the course of the roman empire. The As was also the most common coin in circulation and sestertii were used more for large value transaction. The l.s.d came from the Emperor Charlamagne and his father Peppin who rationalised a the chaotic world of post-Roman coinages inside the Frankish empire that were awash with often debased coinages from the old empire, Byzantium and local mints often with names referencing Roman coins that no longer had value. He forced the overhaul coinage system of the Carolingian empire to match the l.s.d system. The Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia under Offa adopted Carlemagne's system to faciliate trade which effectively replaced old Anglo-Saxon coins over time. The names are only in Latin because Latin names for coins were still common after the Roman empire collapsed.
      Also, the idea that this was used for centuries is not exactly true either. For most of the history of the system the libra and solidus were mainly a values used for grouping large values for bookkeeping purposes, units of account - just as the guinea always was up until decimalisation. The penny was the common coin used in everyday transactions and most people didn't have to worry about other coins. Only from about the time of Henry VII did coins like shillings (originally called testoons), crowns and gold soveriegns (worth 1 pound) actually started to be used, and primarily only by merchants, not everyday people in normal life. These values weren't even the only unit of account that existed, there were others such as the Mark which was a set weight of gold - in Germany this unit of account became the basis for latter coinages but not in England. Indeed, when you realise that people grouped the values of large number of pennies (and then shillings) in pounds, this was the value of a fictional pound of gold that I they were comparing it against. And that is why there is a weight value called pound and a currency.

  • @piobmhor8529
    @piobmhor8529 2 місяці тому +209

    Canada went to a decimal system before it was even a country. In 1851 it was decided to switch to a decimal system and using the term dollar and cents to make commerce with the United States easier. Although Pounds Sterling were legal tender throughout the colonies, the transition to the decimal dollar system was in full use by Confederation in 1867.

    • @lukek1949
      @lukek1949 Місяць тому +2

      Yes, the first decimal Canadian coins came out in 1858.

    • @kazikokaziko4903
      @kazikokaziko4903 Місяць тому +2

      other then usa and uk world normally isnt like donkey stoborn and silly .
      like imperial system
      usa syill resist fee5t inc yaerrd bla blza ounce paund garabge systems
      so im not so sure about canada i think becouse of so close to usa its moslty metric some still partly binded with usa
      wgı jknow maybe usa resist this long becouse of 100 cent do 1 dollar when gain indepeted they stick with imperial system but on money changed

    • @lukek1949
      @lukek1949 Місяць тому +11

      @@kazikokaziko4903 Canada is officially metric. Been that way since the 1970s, but because of the proximity of the U.S., remnants of the imperial system remain. For instance, people often still give their height in feet and inches , and weight in pounds, even though official documents (like a driver’s license) are given in metric. A lot of the trades like carpentry and home renovations still use imperial, even though metric would be obviously easier. Plus there are some really strange things like ovens calibrated in Fahrenheit, even though temperatures haven’t be broadcasted in Fahrenheit since the around early 1980s. People under 40 years old, generally will not understand imperial measures where imperial has disappeared (like road distances, speeds, and weather temperatures). It’s an interesting mix, and I think most Canadians don’t really think of it. But it does look a bit funny when compared to to a typical European or Asian country.

    • @-danR
      @-danR Місяць тому +2

      @@lukek1949 "People under 40 years old, generally will not understand imperial measures..."
      Generally, yes, but they are quite handy with them if they work in hardware and fabric stores, etc.

    • @tonyclemens4213
      @tonyclemens4213 23 дні тому

      @@lukek1949 Metric/Imperial can cause trouble if you're not careful. First time in the US I picked up a rental car and while driving on the freeway got the car to 100 and wondering why people were driving so slow. 100mph is a "bit" faster than 100kph

  • @suecox2308
    @suecox2308 3 роки тому +2256

    It's not that people felt the new decimal system was "too difficult to learn," it's just that most people had to spend the first year calculating the new prices into the old money, to decide whether shop keepers were cheating them or giving them a good deal. Even now, 40 years on, it's a trope of casual conversation among those of a certain generation to say, about almost anything measurable, from speed limits to the length of dress fabric--"What's that in old money?"

    • @PLuMUK54
      @PLuMUK54 2 роки тому +125

      They certainly did cheat as well!

    • @nienke7713
      @nienke7713 2 роки тому +296

      reminds me of when the Netherlands changed from Gulden to Euros, there was an official set conversion rate and people very much converted the prices to see if they were getting a good or bad deal; even to this day, some older people (and some younger people who adhere to very conservative opinions) still convert Euro prices back to Gulden and then go on a rant about how the Euro has made things more expensive, being either clueless or wilfully ignorant to inflation that would've equally happened if we hadn't made the switch

    • @rjones6219
      @rjones6219 2 роки тому +52

      A friend of mine, who's sadly now dead, often went on about decimslisation, saying how we lost a 140 pennies.

    • @АндрейВавилин-п8р
      @АндрейВавилин-п8р 2 роки тому +40

      Boomers gonna boom

    • @nienke7713
      @nienke7713 2 роки тому +9

      @N Fels my grandparents (CDA voters), I've also seen people online who support PVV, FvD, and/or JA21 who do it (and that's where you'll find the younger people who do it as well)
      I can see that sort of stuff coming from SP as well, they're the most conservative party on the left, they're populists, and there's a reason voters sometimes go between SP and PVV (not sure if it's also the case with FvD and JA21 going to/from SP)

  • @vozil7829
    @vozil7829 3 роки тому +3892

    "Wales was the only sensible one" well there's a sentence I never thought I would hear

    • @chiefsargeet
      @chiefsargeet 3 роки тому +114

      Hello

    • @vozil7829
      @vozil7829 3 роки тому +97

      @@chiefsargeet hello mr welshman, wales is the greatest country on earth imo

    • @CHKNSkratch
      @CHKNSkratch 3 роки тому +57

      It's .. it's hear

    • @RetroPlus
      @RetroPlus 3 роки тому +11

      @@chiefsargeet Hello big sexy welshman

    • @satan1841
      @satan1841 3 роки тому +1

      @@chiefsargeet hello

  • @dougmhd2006
    @dougmhd2006 3 роки тому +829

    This reminds me of a Monty Python's Flying Circus sketch which had the 'old system' as part of the dialog while the phrase "Sketch Written Before Decimalisation" appeared on the screen.

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad 2 роки тому +25

      I remember that one: it's the one where two pepperpots buy a strap on brain that malfunctions.

    • @JamesSkemp
      @JamesSkemp 2 роки тому +14

      (New Brain from Currys was the sketch. I looked it up because I was curious. Only video online is pretty shoddy, so hard to make it out, but the text is present.)

    • @stefanfriedt3450
      @stefanfriedt3450 2 місяці тому +5

      Tax is 5 pence of a further sixpence. 5 pence of a further sixpence? And what about the last penny? I embezzled it.

    • @asmodon
      @asmodon 2 місяці тому +6

      „That shilling, is it net or gross?“ „It’s British, sir.“

    • @virgorising7388
      @virgorising7388 Місяць тому +4

      The Beatles "Taxman" should have the same disclaimer. "There's one for you, nineteen for me, 'Cause I'm the taxman." Wilson's Labour government had the Beatles paying a 95% supertax.

  • @manasseskamau5327
    @manasseskamau5327 2 місяці тому +94

    In Kenya we use the shilling as inherited from Great Britain(as they were then)but we simplified it. One Kenya shilling is equivalent to 100 cents.

    • @sologj
      @sologj Місяць тому +2

      And shillings are also called bob

    • @hectorcot597
      @hectorcot597 Місяць тому +2

      Great Britain is just the name given to the largest of the islands in the British Isles, it still exists and it's only a geographical term.
      The country is called the United Kingdom, not Great Britain

    • @dylan__dog
      @dylan__dog Місяць тому +3

      @@hectorcot597 quit being pedantic, it is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and NI is irrelevant in the eyes of 99% of people

    • @Adiee5Priv
      @Adiee5Priv Місяць тому +1

      ​@hectorcot597 that's the case in English. Overall, this actually depends on the language spoken, so it's possible, that in their native language, the country is indeed called Great Britain and they just didn't know it's supposed to be called United Kingdom in English

    • @manasseskamau5327
      @manasseskamau5327 Місяць тому

      @@Adiee5Priv
      Britain ruled Kenya from 1897-1963 and we have tons of literature all in the name of Great Britain. The colonisers used UK and Britain synonymously. We know our history man😁

  • @deweylipschitz1516
    @deweylipschitz1516 2 роки тому +970

    Yeah, l remember my grandfather complained about it constantly. He called decimalization the "yanking" of the British Economy. He knew the old system very well and was extremely reluctant to change . Of course ,he also disliked central heating amongst many other things.

    • @MrJimheeren
      @MrJimheeren Рік тому +161

      Don’t ask his opinions about polish people

    • @jamesconnolly5164
      @jamesconnolly5164 11 місяців тому +52

      Why did he not like central heating? Winter sucks.

    • @Simon-xi7lb
      @Simon-xi7lb 11 місяців тому

      ​@@jamesconnolly5164central heating turns men into wusses! 😤

    • @snoipahyeezy9943
      @snoipahyeezy9943 10 місяців тому +183

      ​@@jamesconnolly5164 "My childhood sucked and so should yours!"
      Or something like that.

    • @hoilst265
      @hoilst265 10 місяців тому +27

      There's nothing more miserable than an ageing Pom.

  • @zach11241
    @zach11241 2 роки тому +1719

    It took me about three seconds to do the math in my head for how many coins were needed. I was totally wrong; but still, three seconds!

    • @MrDannyDetail
      @MrDannyDetail 2 роки тому +53

      So was he, as he forgot about the 10 bob note that would remove the need for the crowns.

    • @teeteringonthebrink.305
      @teeteringonthebrink.305 2 роки тому +40

      It's easy. Just pay a tenner (a ten pound note) and get change back.

    • @jek__
      @jek__ 2 роки тому +8

      I was done instantly with the math! I got no answer and didn't try. But still, instant results!

    • @PopeLando
      @PopeLando 2 роки тому +4

      I didn't calculate the coins, but I did do the sum in my head, and not in the right to left pen-and-paper method he used. £3+£5=£8, 16s+15s>£1 so 8 becomes £9. Then 15s is 5s less than a pound, so you subtract 5 from 16 to get 11s. 11+10 > 12, so 11s becomes 12s, and either 10-1 or 11-2 both leave 9d.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace 2 роки тому +3

      I can get the wrong answer in 1 second

  • @Seydaschu
    @Seydaschu 3 роки тому +1146

    Fun fact: You know how the Mad Hatter from Alice in Wonderland usually wears a hat with a card on it that reads "10/6"?
    You probably thought that was a weird size measurement, but it's actually the price tag! That hat costs 10 shilling 6 pence, therefore half a Guinea.
    He's such an idiot, he wears a hat with the price tag still on it!

    • @mpf1947
      @mpf1947 3 роки тому +185

      He's a hatter; he makes hats. He's simply wearing his merchandise.

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 2 роки тому +103

      Actually, the price was never originally mentioned in the story. The price was put there by the illustrator, and used by Charles when he adapted the story for younger readers.

    • @lookoutforchris
      @lookoutforchris 2 роки тому +53

      Joggers do that in the US today 😂
      Bruh, you bought the hat. Take the dam stickers off!
      Joggers gonna jog though.

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 2 роки тому +16

      He isn't an idiot, he's a salesperson.

    • @Seydaschu
      @Seydaschu 2 роки тому +13

      @@LMB222 Or... Both!

  • @MrOtistetrax
    @MrOtistetrax 2 місяці тому +56

    I was born in 1978 and grew up with the 1/2 penny still being in circulation. I used to regularly see 5p coins that still had “one shilling” on them.

    • @racutis
      @racutis 2 місяці тому +7

      The shilling was the same size as a 5p and the 2 shilling was the same size as the 10p for the longest time. The sixpence was also in circulation as 2.5p as a lot of people liked that coin.

    • @MrOtistetrax
      @MrOtistetrax 2 місяці тому +6

      @@racutis One of my favourite phrases in the English language is “tuppence ha’p’ny”. I just love the way it sounds.

    • @lukek1949
      @lukek1949 Місяць тому +2

      @@MrOtistetrax we see that in the Mary Poppins song “Feed the Birds…tuppence (ie two pence) a bag.” We also see the actor playing the boy, Michael holding 2 Great Britain pennies (copper coins) from that time period!

    • @Ned-Ryerson
      @Ned-Ryerson Місяць тому +3

      The first time I came to Britain in the early 80s, halfpence coins under the new system were still around. We chatted to British lads in the hotel lobby and they actually parted with one of their halfpennies so I could take it back to Germany.

    • @splintercast8092
      @splintercast8092 Місяць тому +1

      @@racutis I remember the 1 and 2 shillings being in circulation until the late '80s but didn't realise the sixpence was kept after decimalisation until 1980.

  • @lsmith992
    @lsmith992 2 роки тому +566

    I grew up with this and remember it well.
    I was born in 1953 and was 18 when the system changed ( prelude to joining the common market).
    The crown wasn't commonly used then. It tended to be a commemorative coin, given as a present for children to put in their money boxes.

    • @MustacheDLuffy
      @MustacheDLuffy Рік тому +22

      We have coins like that usually half dollar of dollar coins

    • @sluin
      @sluin Рік тому +14

      @@MustacheDLuffy yea, many 2 euro coins also have special engraving on the back

    • @MustacheDLuffy
      @MustacheDLuffy Рік тому +10

      @@sluin I have a large dollar coin which is special to me since it was given by my parents when I was young

    • @jamiehughes5573
      @jamiehughes5573 Рік тому +2

      Older crown coins(92.5% silver) are equivalent to the US Peace dollar/Morgan Dollar

    • @johnforrest695
      @johnforrest695 Рік тому +4

      Was going to way the same thing. What we did have though were 10 shilling notes. BTW the way the amounts were written down on prices is not as shown here. It was not (say) £3 3s 11d but £3 3/11. If the amount was smallish (say less than £5) prices were often given in shillings and pence - say 59/11. Oh and we never said "pence" it was always "punce" - short "uh" sound. I have no memory of farthings - I think they went before the 60s when I was born.

  • @DaL33T5
    @DaL33T5 3 роки тому +4615

    It's called the LSD system because you need to *be* on LSD to have any idea how it works.

    • @maggiemurphy5323
      @maggiemurphy5323 3 роки тому +106

      L for pound, (livre in French) S for shilling, d for "dinaru" (Roman penny).

    • @ClementinesCoins
      @ClementinesCoins 3 роки тому +137

      @@maggiemurphy5323 actually stood for, librae, solidi and denarii

    • @jan_Masewin
      @jan_Masewin 3 роки тому +16

      @@maggiemurphy5323 Even more names O,O

    • @swiftrebooted7704
      @swiftrebooted7704 3 роки тому +78

      Uh actually it stands for L (Lol) S (So how you guys doing? D (Deez coins )

    • @bl1tz533
      @bl1tz533 3 роки тому +39

      Can confirm, did acid, now i know this and imperial are better

  • @cameronmuhic5735
    @cameronmuhic5735 11 місяців тому +432

    I was an American child living in London in 1971 when the change happened but I learned the old system first. Apparently it's still lurking in the back of my mind because I was at a pub in Sheffield about 10 years ago that was having a problem with their cash tills and the waitress was trying to figure my lunch bill without one. I looked at her and said "oh-you owe me 7 pounds 6 shillings change from a £20 note.
    She looked at me very oddly and I realized that she wouldn't have even been born in 1971-let alone dealt with £/s/d!

    • @GameyRaccoon
      @GameyRaccoon Місяць тому +5

      ahahahahhaha

    • @kukifitte7357
      @kukifitte7357 Місяць тому +2

      @@GameyRaccoongem

    • @Beery1962
      @Beery1962 Місяць тому +14

      I had a similar experience going back to the UK in 2019 after living in the US for 30 years. For some reason my brain could only remember the old pennies (even though I'd lived in England for 13 years with the new money), so I was confused when a cashier handed me some new pennies. I seriously thought they were ha'pennies. When I said so, she looked at me as if I was insane. She was maybe 25 years old.

    • @GAMER123GAMING
      @GAMER123GAMING Місяць тому

      @@kukifitte7357 Tranni

    • @sargera1
      @sargera1 Місяць тому

      What's the d ? Is it dime

  • @chrismackett9044
    @chrismackett9044 2 роки тому +250

    Crowns were not generally minted, except as commemorative coins. However we did have the ten shilling note, which I don’t think was mentioned. I remember going into a newsagent on the day we went decimal: I bought my usual newspaper and handed over a pound - the lady behind the counter just thrust a handful of coins at me and said ‘Take whatever you want’.

    • @evertonshorts9376
      @evertonshorts9376 11 місяців тому +2

      Wasn't it replaced by the 10 bob bit (50p) in 1966?

    • @stuartjones7229
      @stuartjones7229 11 місяців тому

      Funny

    • @danielrussell446
      @danielrussell446 9 місяців тому

      @@evertonshorts937650p came in in 1969 I have a first issue at home

    • @andrewt836
      @andrewt836 4 місяці тому +2

      The wreath crown shown in this video is currently worth £200+

    • @chrisinnes2128
      @chrisinnes2128 3 місяці тому +1

      Scotland didn't have a ten shilling note

  • @VasiliskGUU
    @VasiliskGUU 2 роки тому +552

    I love how you illustrated "the ancient times" of Great Britain with a picture of medieval Moscow 😁

    • @audiaudi873
      @audiaudi873 2 роки тому +62

      I think, it was an "eastern egg", because Ukrainian and Russian currencies names have the exact same origin. In medieval Rus "hrivna" was a piece of silver that was cut to smaller pieces which were called "Ruble". Plus Russia was the very first country in the world which decimalaised its national currency

    • @Gumardee_coins_and_banknotes
      @Gumardee_coins_and_banknotes 2 роки тому +3

      @@audiaudi873 the Papal States decimalised around 1500. So could be a tie.

    • @prxnv
      @prxnv 2 роки тому

      @Σπυροσ Ντινος lmao

    • @yarovitek
      @yarovitek 2 роки тому +11

      That's not Moscow. That's Novgorod, a mercantile city state destroyed by despotic Moscow.

    • @VasiliskGUU
      @VasiliskGUU 2 роки тому +2

      @@yarovitek lol go back to school internet troll 🤪

  • @bouffon1
    @bouffon1 2 роки тому +392

    I worked in a pub in the sixties and was able to add up the most complicated and long orders in my head. I vaguely remember someone coming in to work on a Monday showing us his decimal coins, but then I emigrated. We still had coins dating from the Victorian era, I still have a penny where you can just read "1859".

    • @Chonksta
      @Chonksta Рік тому +34

      kinda cool if its 1859, UK changed all copper coins in 1860, so an 1859 would actually be not legal tender, demonetized in 1869

    • @howdoipickaname9815
      @howdoipickaname9815 Рік тому +7

      I'm Canadian, and have a British farthing from 1918

    • @ankoku37
      @ankoku37 2 місяці тому

      Yeah like I want to drag the system but honestly as someone who's worked in meat markets enough to be able to convert pounds, ounces, and grams in my head with ease, I get how it's possible for people to be used to this system

    • @spaghettiisyummy.3623
      @spaghettiisyummy.3623 Місяць тому

      That penny is worth a lot to coin collectors..

    • @mikeblatzheim2797
      @mikeblatzheim2797 Місяць тому +1

      I've got a Swiss half Franc dated from 1881, which I got as change in a bakery around ten years back. That was quite a surprise. Meanwhile the oldest Euro coins are dated 1998, though that by itself is quite interesting, as that's two years before they even became a legal tender.

  • @artisansvs5213
    @artisansvs5213 Місяць тому +9

    When you grew up with it, it wasn’t hard at all, you carried the combinations in your memory . (I’m 75). Everyone used it as second nature.

  • @Tysto
    @Tysto 2 роки тому +296

    As an American boy, i learned the pound/shilling/pence system from the Annotated Casebook of Sherlock Holmes, which explained all the British slang & archaisms in the wide margins. I wish i still had it.

    • @MatthewHolevinski
      @MatthewHolevinski 2 роки тому +17

      My god, I wish I was more well read, that is an awesome anecdote to drop. Also as an american boy, I am still staunchly against base-10 and metric, mostly for the same reasons the French complained about it back in the 1700's. For day to day human life, it is an awful way to do weights and measures, a base 12 system has more factors and would serve a far better purpose.

    • @zephyr6927
      @zephyr6927 2 роки тому +1

      @@MatthewHolevinski rlly? care to elaborate y?

    • @MatthewHolevinski
      @MatthewHolevinski 2 роки тому +10

      @@zephyr6927 if you aren't dealing with the astro or the nano on a day to day basis metric doesn't make any sense. I already said before based on factors alone imperial is a far quicker way when encountering day to day life. Fractionation of numbers is easy but I realize I'm saying that as an American.

    • @zephyr6927
      @zephyr6927 2 роки тому +1

      @@MatthewHolevinski not actually familiar with Imperial, but I'll take a look

    • @MatthewHolevinski
      @MatthewHolevinski 2 роки тому +9

      @@zephyr6927 find yourself an American carpenter or someone that has been in construction for a long time and you'll see some insane fast arithmetic.

  • @MorganHJackson
    @MorganHJackson 3 роки тому +4733

    I'm sure the Americans would be fine, they keep trying to convince us that 12 land leagues, 24 rods and 73 barleycorns is a perfectly understandable measurement of distance.

    • @justaguy5770
      @justaguy5770 3 роки тому +474

      Make sure you grab a bushel of apples and send them a few fathoms deep

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 3 роки тому +404

      This is something that I find so amusing, the American seem to pride themselves on not using the metric system (decimal) since it's "not any more convenient" ........ whilst their ancestors made the first decimal currency explicitly because it's simpler to use (also, the reason the US didn't adopt the Metric System at the dawn of the XIXth century is the biggest plothole I have ever seen. What ? It would make you seem "too french" ? What does that even mean and why would the guys that wanted to distance themselves from the British would pass on this opportunity to stick it to Britain and reassure their distinct identity? Whoever wrote that should be fired, it's way too unbelievable)

    • @sleepdeep305
      @sleepdeep305 3 роки тому +431

      @@sephikong8323 Better than the UK, where they use fricken metric and imperial system side by side. "Oh, yeh mate, just go down about three miles, turn right and a coupl'a hundred metres later an' bob's your uncle!"

    • @jeremiahblake3949
      @jeremiahblake3949 3 роки тому +234

      @@sephikong8323 We honestly aren't that zealous about the imperial system, and we use the metric system in day to day life for a bunch of things alongside the imperial system. But no one is too enthusiastic about devoting the necessary resources and education to make the switch, and there isn't much pressure to do so since we're doing fine as it is.

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 3 роки тому +103

      @@jeremiahblake3949 I am mostly talking about the innumerable keyboard warriors that prop up in literally every video that talk about the Metric system (even sometimes randomly when the Metric system is used for measurement as well) to say that the Imperial system is just "objectively better and more intuitive" and defend it like their lives are on the line. I know that most people don't really care, but there's a legitimate portion of the American people that use the Imperial system as a form of pride and defend it as if it's Patriotic to do so

  • @xmanhoe
    @xmanhoe 2 роки тому +434

    I remember the last day you could use the old coins , we stood outside our local shop asking people "any old money"? We ended up with pockets full 😎 we ate sweets for days 🤣

    • @mae8646
      @mae8646 2 роки тому +21

      For real? That's amazing

    • @xmanhoe
      @xmanhoe 2 роки тому +58

      @@mae8646 yes 😎 we also feel very sick from eating all the sweets🤢🤣😎

    • @everythingiseconomics9742
      @everythingiseconomics9742 2 роки тому

      @@xmanhoe those ate some mad lads if I've ever seen them

    • @themadplotter
      @themadplotter 2 роки тому +5

      Sounds like a scene from minder, terrys gotta get the old currency for sweets from kids in time for Arthur to get it changed at the bank.

    • @px8
      @px8 2 роки тому

      @@xmanhoe how old were you/ when was this may i ask?

  • @itsapittie
    @itsapittie Місяць тому +78

    One of the advantages of the old system was that it could be divided so many ways. A pound could be evenly divided by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 20, 30, 50, 60, and 80. This was probably a good thing in a time when many people had very little money and a few people had a lot of money. It made it possible to price a huge variety of goods in a way that was easy to calculate and pay.

    • @matthewroger6889
      @matthewroger6889 Місяць тому +12

      That's the reason so many old systems used 12 or 60 for fractional units, those numbers have more ways to divide them then any number of similar size. That's why there are 12 inches to the foot and 12 troy ounces to the pound. And even in metric you still have 60 seconds in a minute and 60 minutes in an hour. You can see the advantage of this system, if I have 1 hour to complete a test with 15 questions on it its trivial to figure out that means you have 4 minutes per question if you want to finish on time. Now compare that to trying to figure out how far 1/15 of a kilometer is without a calculator.

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 Місяць тому

      @@matthewroger6889 Why should I ever need to calculate 1/15 of a kilometer in my head?

    • @alanpeters874
      @alanpeters874 Місяць тому +3

      ​@matthewroger6889 all good until you have to work out interest payments.

    • @drageveilertsen2509
      @drageveilertsen2509 Місяць тому +5

      @matthewroger6889 I've seen that kind of argument before, the thing is there's no situation where you'd have to figure out 1/15th of a km. Tat kind of fraction is not used in metric - because, as you said, it would be wildly impractical. Even someone saying "1/4 of a km" instead of "250 meters" would sound weird

    • @liam3284
      @liam3284 Місяць тому +1

      That seems useful for the price tables once used for long distance trade.

  • @jimthorne304
    @jimthorne304 2 роки тому +161

    The switchover to Decimal went remarkably smoothly, I was in supermarkets all day (all week in fact), there were no problems anywhere. In contrast, Imperial weights and measures are still with us, and it took several decades to stop using Fahrenheit temperatures.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 11 місяців тому +16

      In a way we still use the old systems in a strange an uniquly British hybrid. High temperatures are in F (close to 100), cold temperatures are in C (close to 0/freezing). Gold is still sold by the ounce (different to non-precious metal ounce), speed and distance on roads are in miles. Beer and milk sold in pints while fuel is sold by the litre but we still refer to economy in mpg (gallon!)

    • @valmarsiglia
      @valmarsiglia 11 місяців тому +1

      So when you go to a pub, do you order 0.473 litres of bitter?

    • @EdKolis
      @EdKolis 10 місяців тому +2

      A chemist goes to a bar and orders 473mL of H2O...

    • @KKmanmi
      @KKmanmi 10 місяців тому +5

      @@valmarsiglia That's an american pint, ours are 20 floz

    • @valmarsiglia
      @valmarsiglia 10 місяців тому +1

      @@KKmanmi Way to get the point, lol.

  • @32582657
    @32582657 2 роки тому +109

    As children, my brother and I spent a short time with a very nice distant relative I had never met before. He disappeared for a minute and came back and smiled and shook our hands. As he did we could feel he was “secretly” passing each of us a half crown. This was a great gift for a child. It was a pleasantly big coin that you could buy something nice with (maybe chocolate, etc.) This left me with a very good impression of this man.
    I am American, but always had a fondness for the old type of British coinage..

    • @tooyoungtobeold8756
      @tooyoungtobeold8756 2 роки тому +1

      You were lucky, we tended to get a sixpence.

    • @christopherdean1326
      @christopherdean1326 Рік тому +1

      I still remember my godfather (a saint of a man, RIP Uncle David) giving me a TEN SHILLING note in my birthday card! I thought I could buy the whole of Woolworth's toy department! I couldn't, but I had a damn good try!

  • @adrianhutchings3377
    @adrianhutchings3377 2 роки тому +34

    As a lad growing up in 1960's Britain I don't remember £sd being a problem to anyone. Using it came naturally.
    A six pence piece was always a 'tanner', a shilling was always a 'bob'. Never used the term 'florin'; it was always a 'two bob bit'. The crown didn't exist in practice, but the half-crown did- it was considered a tidy sum if you had one in your pocket. It would make for a good night out in town! The guinea (21 shillings) was a term widely used to show prices in shops, but there was no actual guinea coin. There was also the ten shilling (ten bob) note, by the way- you really were able to have a right royal night out with one of those.

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK 11 місяців тому +6

      Naturally... after being exposed to it regularly nearly every day from childhood.
      I assume you didn't have to do much accounting with large numbers of transactions. That must have really sucked before decimalisation.

    • @kevinwilliams1602
      @kevinwilliams1602 2 місяці тому +1

      Didn't we used to call the half crown " arf a dollar?"

  • @staceygrove5976
    @staceygrove5976 2 місяці тому +20

    When I was growing up in the 1960s, the 'three pence' coin was usually referred to as a 'threepenny bit' (pronounced 'threppenny'), though older people sometimes said 'thruppenny' or 'thruppence'. By then it was a twelve--sided brass coin, quite unlike any other British coin, though prior to 1946 it had been a much smaller conventionally shaped silver one.

    • @alanmahoney167
      @alanmahoney167 Місяць тому +1

      Born in 1959 and grew up in London. I remember silver thrupenny bits. They were quite rare as far as I can remember at the time

    • @staceygrove5976
      @staceygrove5976 Місяць тому +2

      @@alanmahoney167
      I was born in 1957 and am pretty sure I never saw a silver threepence in circulation. The twelve-sided brass coins were manufactured from 1937 onwards, but they also continued to mint the silver ones until 1945.

    • @Australian_Made
      @Australian_Made Місяць тому

      In Australia, OUR
      thruppenny bit
      was silver coloured, and
      EXTREMELY TINY.

  • @Mac13ie
    @Mac13ie 2 роки тому +295

    The 10 shilling note was an important part of the currency which you neglected to mention. It was replaced, after decimalisation, by the 50 pence piece.

    • @johnlightfoot9967
      @johnlightfoot9967 2 роки тому +8

      I was going to say that, poor 10 bob note ignored

    • @sextonblake4258
      @sextonblake4258 2 роки тому +2

      The 50p coin.Wow yes. I worked on the milk then and we used to call them "dustbin lids".

    • @insertnamehere5146
      @insertnamehere5146 2 роки тому +4

      lovely brown note. felt rich when i got one on my birthday in a card from nan

    • @nightwishlover8913
      @nightwishlover8913 2 роки тому +1

      @@insertnamehere5146 Yup. The "ten-bob note" or " half-a-bar" was a nice thing.

    • @COIcultist
      @COIcultist 2 роки тому

      The 50p coin was introduced before 1971.

  • @Gilbertthetart
    @Gilbertthetart Рік тому +87

    I asked my grandad what it was like and he had the most British response; he said
    “It wasn’t that bad”
    He still has a couple dozen old coins and he shows me them once every often and I find it very interesting how people lived back in the day

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis 2 місяці тому +3

      You sound like you're talking about early medieval England not just before
      1970

    • @Gilbertthetart
      @Gilbertthetart 2 місяці тому +1

      @@Ana_crusisnah I am, it was a quite different world before 1971, my grandad has shown me old ha’pennies, pennies, thruppenny bits, silver sixpences, 1 and 2 shilling coins, and a couple of half crowns, he was born in 1941 so basically grew up with the old system, which yes, does sound medieval because that’s basically how old the system was!

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis 2 місяці тому +1

      @@Gilbertthetart
      It wasn't "quite a different world" sugarplum. It was the same old world not very long ago.
      it's a long-standing old system but nobody needs to talk about it as if they are talking about medieval history we only went decimal in England in 1970 I remember it very well I remember the old money it seems perfectly normal to me because I was born in 1956. Like everybody else I used it everyday.
      You just think it sounds very old and strange to you because you didn't live with it

  • @seneca983
    @seneca983 3 роки тому +290

    3:00 There *was* a coin called guinea worth 21 shillings between 1717 and 1816. (The coin also existed before 1717 but that's the year its value was legally fixed at 21 shillings).

    • @LeslieGilpinRailways
      @LeslieGilpinRailways 3 роки тому +10

      Agreed, originally the Guinea had local values and varied across the country by a few pence.

    • @parvchetri0995
      @parvchetri0995 3 роки тому +4

      I think it was also used during Stuart times, during Charles II's era.

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 3 роки тому +15

      @@parvchetri0995 Yes, but back then the value wasn't fixed at 21 shillings because pounds were made of silver whereas guinea was made of gold and the relative price of those metals affected the relative value of these coins.

    • @parvchetri0995
      @parvchetri0995 3 роки тому +6

      @@seneca983 I see, I heard the story of Charles II fighting the London fire alongside fire fighters and he then rewarded the firefighters 100 guineas or so.

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +9

      @@seneca983 : Yeah, the guinea was *intended* to be the same as a pound, but the fluctuating exchange rate between gold and silver messed that up.

  • @dacorum8053
    @dacorum8053 Місяць тому +7

    Decimalisation ushered in a period of inflation which peaked a few years later. The reason was because 240 old pence now equalled 100 new pence, and prices were normally rounded up after decimalisation. We were left with a lot of prices like 2.5p and the tendency was to round them up to 3p, an increase in price of 20%. What you have to remember is that prices were far, far lower then so this rounding up really increased the cost of living of basic items and therefore inflation.

    • @aaronkingston3444
      @aaronkingston3444 Місяць тому

      The people were definitely robbed. The government turn a shilling worth 12p into 5p decimal. You could get a dozen eggs for a shilling, but I doubt you get a dozen for 5p decimal.

  • @johnscanlan9335
    @johnscanlan9335 3 роки тому +56

    When I was a kid my family traveled to London in 1970. Soon after we arrived my mother took me to Selfridge's to go shopping and we got on the Park Lane bus. My mother held out her hand to the conductor when, I think, he said the fare would be something like truppence haipny! She just held out her hand full of coins and said, "take whatever you want!"

  • @MySparkle888
    @MySparkle888 3 роки тому +123

    The metric system is the tool of the devil! My car gets 40 rods to the hogshead and that's the way I likes it.

    • @PLuMUK54
      @PLuMUK54 2 роки тому +16

      You need to change that Gas guzzler, you should be getting 60 perches to the jeroboam!

    • @jasonfullerton7763
      @jasonfullerton7763 Рік тому +4

      Nice one, Grandpa.

    • @Meight50five
      @Meight50five 2 місяці тому +7

      What does that convert to in French fries per freedom eagle?

    • @frmattdrummond6535
      @frmattdrummond6535 Місяць тому +1

      Yarp!

    • @liam3284
      @liam3284 Місяць тому

      I just want to know how many 升 per 千里

  • @johnmichaelcule8423
    @johnmichaelcule8423 3 роки тому +120

    Farthings lasted to 1961. The Crown was very rare: I didn't see any until they started to issue them as collectors items after decimalisation. There were Guinea coins which were gold but they were antiques by the early years of the 20th Century. And you skipped the stage before the 100p=£1. There was a commission that wanted to halve the value of the base currency and make it equal to half a pound or ten shillings. A shilling would be worth 10p during the transition and tests showed people made fewer errors with the new currency if they tried it that way. But the decision came up during a Labour government and they didn't want the heart ache of the Tories saying that Labour had cut the value of the currency in half. (Yes, it's daft but it would likely have worked.)

    • @LeslieGilpinRailways
      @LeslieGilpinRailways 3 роки тому +2

      Isn't that what the Australians did when they decimalised?

    • @johnmichaelcule8423
      @johnmichaelcule8423 3 роки тому +4

      @@LeslieGilpinRailways Apparantly so! Thank you: I hadn't known that.

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +6

      @@LeslieGilpinRailways : Yes, they did: The Australian Dollar was half of an Australian pound. They had done studies a few years before decimalization that found it was psychologically easier for shoppers to adjust to, e.g., a "6s 8d" price translating to "67c" instead of "33½p". (Prior to the high inflation of the 1970's, the shilling was the "main" currency unit for everyday purchases, and pounds only entered the picture for things like house and car payments.)
      But in the UK, politicians and banking interests insisted on keeping the pound around.

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +6

      And I've seen an Australian joke that the replacement of pounds with dollars was great "because suddenly I had twice as much money" ;-)

    • @memesthatmakeyouwannadie3133
      @memesthatmakeyouwannadie3133 3 роки тому +1

      I think it was partially that the pound was (and still might be) the largest or 2nd largest reserve currency in the world, so you can't just change its value or demonetize old coins without massive upheaval in the world market. Australia and South Africa were nowhere near that powerful.

  • @welshpete12
    @welshpete12 Місяць тому +3

    Having been brought up using this old system . We never thought any thing about it , we just used it every day . One point not mentioned here is the new system. Using 100 pence to the pound instead of 240 . meant it was inflationary so goods went up by 50 % .

  • @nemrody7828
    @nemrody7828 3 роки тому +356

    5:13 "this system is ridiculous" proceeds to show clip of coins being weighed to determine their total value.
    Oh, I'm sorry, you didn't hear about that? The entire British coinage system neatly followed a rule of weights, so no matter how mixed up a bag of coins would be, the weight would always add up to a number corelating with the value. Many scales used to have markers to help with this activity.

    • @harrypotter5460
      @harrypotter5460 3 роки тому +99

      Still ridiculous

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +43

      The US used the same system, where the dime, quarter, half-dollar, and dollar coins each contained an amount of silver (or post-1965, copper/nickel alloy) proportional to their value.

    • @elton1981
      @elton1981 3 роки тому +12

      Supermarkets still cash up by weighing the coins. Because I the wight of each coin is known, but it doesn’t signify anything.

    • @nemrody7828
      @nemrody7828 3 роки тому +30

      @@elton1981 of course, you can do that anywhere, but can you weigh a bag with 30 quarters, 17 pennies and 12 dimes without having to sit down and sort them?

    • @ren.67
      @ren.67 3 роки тому +45

      Sorry to bust your balls but this is still too fucking ridiculous.

  • @krinkrin5982
    @krinkrin5982 3 роки тому +266

    After playing Warhammer FRP for a year, I've become quite familiar with the old British system. It's not really that complicated all things considered. The main reason for what we now find weird was actually divisions. Since people did not have access to a convenient calculator back in the day, having a currency exchange with a large number of divisors was very convenient. You could have a farmer selling a box of eggs, but you needed only two out of 6. No problem, just divide the value by 3 (or 4, 5, 6 or 12) in your head. Our current system has only two divisors: 2 and 5.
    Also, the decimal system still has coins/notes for 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 multiples of the basic units. You just give them names, and it's almost as complicated as the old system.

    • @voxelfusion9894
      @voxelfusion9894 3 роки тому +25

      It really isn't as complicated as the old system though, since with decimal you can always condense it all down into a single, simple number.

    • @monkeymox2544
      @monkeymox2544 3 роки тому +37

      ​@@voxelfusion9894 Well you could in the old system too, since everything could be broken down into pence (or half-pence) - one pound, two shillings and sixpence is 258 pence. The older system just seems complicated for us today, but for people who grew up with it, it was easy. And the OP is right, mathematically it's a much more flexible system. There's a reason that we divide our days into 24 hours, with 60 minutes per hour, each containing 60 seconds. It's the same reason that we have 360 degrees in a circle: just like with old money, it's more easily divisible.

    • @kalleguld
      @kalleguld 3 роки тому +11

      How often do you actually need to divide currency, though? Adding and subtraction is much more common, and decimal is much more efficient for that task.

    • @monkeymox2544
      @monkeymox2544 3 роки тому +22

      @@kalleguld When dividing things - let's say the grocer has a standard price for a dozen eggs, but you don't need a dozen. Well if you have a currency based on units of 12, you can split a dozen into one, two, three, four, and six. With decimal, that's less easy. Obviously we do this kind of thing less now, but it used to be much more common.
      I should point out that although we've used a base-ten counting system for millennia, decimalisation of currency only began a few hundred years ago. Before that, other systems were used, many not dissimilar to l.s.d. Clearly all those different societies used those systems for a reason, it wasn't just to confuse people in the future. They created systems of currency which suited the needs of people at the time.

    • @krinkrin5982
      @krinkrin5982 3 роки тому +5

      @@kalleguld When buying construction supplies for one. A pack of wood costs X, but you only need Y sheets from it. I agree it's not very common otherwise, but the need is there.

  • @frankbeaton4776
    @frankbeaton4776 2 роки тому +86

    I grew up with this system and never had a problem. Still have a lot of the original coins.

    • @PlayingGilly
      @PlayingGilly 2 роки тому

      They would be worth a few bob now... no pun intended.

    • @philiprice7875
      @philiprice7875 2 роки тому +1

      and this was before inflation and we still had victorian coinage in use i had some old pennies so worn out could not make out vickys head

    • @jgdooley2003
      @jgdooley2003 2 роки тому

      I remember learning times tables which had an extra column after the result for its conversion into shillings and pence. So instead of just reciting 10 10s is one hundred you would recite 10 10's is one hundred, eight and 4 pence.
      Accounts books had columns for pounds shillings and pence and an extra margin for halfpence or farthings.
      Decimal conversion meant grocers and money handlers have to have two cash registers and two sets of bags their coins. Shops took in the old coins and only handed out change in the new coins so that over a few weeks all the old coins were taken out of public circulation.
      I recall that coins like 50p,20p,10p and 5p were introduced early as they had exact equivalents in the old currency, 10s,4s,2s and 1s respectively.The old half crown, 2/6 was got rid of some time earlier. Also got rid of was the old 1/2d coins.
      Then on the 15th Feb 1971 the conversion to the new money was made with pricing being expressed in pounds and pence and 1p and 2p coins being brought into use to make up the set. The notes remained the same as the old notes until later.
      Ireland, unlike the UK, made the much later change to the Euro in 2001 and we had a similar changeover, this time with the entire set of notes, coins having to be changed in one day.
      It wasn't as diffcult to do as most transactions were being done by card, unlike the 1970's when everything was cash.

    • @PopeLando
      @PopeLando 2 роки тому +1

      @@jgdooley2003 50p coin replaced the 10/- note, 10p coin the 2/- coin (or florin) and 5p coin the 1/-. The 20p coin wasn't until much later (its pre-decimal equivalent, a 4/- coin, was a brief unsuccessful experiment in the Victorian era).

  • @tumbleweedtravelblog3227
    @tumbleweedtravelblog3227 2 місяці тому +62

    I very much enjoyeed this broadcast. I was 17 when Britain decimalised it's currency and had been taught both 'metric' and 'imperial' at school from infancy. In no way am I suggesting any return to pounds, shillings and pence but routinely adding and subtracting what now seems to be mind blowing sums in LSD was commonplace in my youth. Everyone could do it easily and quickly, even people who could not read and write. Decimalisation and the soon to follow invention of the pocket calculator have somehow robbed us all of a fiscal mental agility that was once commonplace. Just an observation

    • @Quickshot0
      @Quickshot0 2 місяці тому +8

      Certainly an interesting memory, though if I were to guess between those two factors which mattered the most... Then I figure it was the calculators really that reduced peoples mental agility at numbers and the decimal system probably not at all. After all there were plenty of countries using decimal number systems for far longer and I've certainly not heard of them having trouble calculating their money.
      One can read of similar things in history really, like how there was a complaint in how writing was undermining the memory skill of people. I guess the truth here is, is that people will put less time in training something if they have an easier alternative and then use that time for other things.

    • @tumbleweedtravelblog3227
      @tumbleweedtravelblog3227 2 місяці тому +2

      Good observations, thank you

    • @Quickshot0
      @Quickshot0 2 місяці тому +1

      You're quite welcome.

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID 2 місяці тому +5

      I was born in 1955, and count myself bilingual in both coinage and units of measurement. What I am way, way better at than almost every young adult, let along kid is mental arithmetic and dealing with orders of magnitude. That's a legacy of using slide rules and log tables.
      Also, I recall those working behind the bar had no problem totting up the cot of a round on the fly and working out the change. The really good ones could handle two rounds at once.
      Also, that coins had nicknames added a little character to the currency. Now that has gone, then a bit of British social history and colour has now disappeared, replaced by the anodyne numbers. Even the Americans have retained nickels, dimes, quarters and, strangely, pennies.

    • @Zerbey
      @Zerbey Місяць тому +4

      I was born in 1978, so still had plenty of school teachers around who had taught both "old" and "new" money, we even had a few old textbooks with math sums in it using the old system. One of them challenged us to make change using old currency, and of course none of us could do it. She was able to do so without even thinking about it, as I'm sure anyone from her generation could, I also remember her saying that in her day they didn't learn their times tables up to 12, instead it was up to 20, which I'm sure made working with old money simpler. Like anything, it's what you're used to.

  • @512TheWolf512
    @512TheWolf512 3 роки тому +241

    Honestly, the shilling is just such a good name, I wish it stayed

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +7

      There are still a few countries in Africa that use shillings.

    • @dutchdykefinger
      @dutchdykefinger 2 роки тому +24

      are you being genuine here? or are you just shilling for shilling? ;)

    • @hugolouessard3914
      @hugolouessard3914 2 роки тому +5

      I have to agree. I don't know where the name is from and it never existed in France, but it sounds so good. Better than penny, which is a terrible and sounds like petty, I guess at least that describes their users.

    • @sepgorut2492
      @sepgorut2492 2 роки тому +3

      @@hugolouessard3914 It's from shire= county + ling = derived from ie the coins were minted from silver from the King's appointed coiner.

    • @simonblackham4987
      @simonblackham4987 2 роки тому +3

      Never used the word shilling ... only ever 'bob'

  • @ErraticPT
    @ErraticPT 2 роки тому +123

    And for a long time after, the shilling coin was still in circulation after decimalisation. Up until when the 5p coin was shrunk in 1990 you could find many old shillings still in use, they were still accepted mainly because the size was identical and thus vending machine accepted them as 5p.

    • @MinesAGuinness
      @MinesAGuinness 2 роки тому +9

      And the florin too!

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 2 роки тому +9

      Traveling to the UK in 1991/1992 there were still a lot of pre-decimal coins in use. I brought back quite a variety of them.

    • @brontewcat
      @brontewcat 11 місяців тому +6

      That was true in Australia. We went decimal about 5 years earlier when I was 4, so I don’t remember using the old money, but I remember shillings and sixpence being used. The shilling was used as 10 cents and sixpence as 5 cents.

    • @IlSqueak
      @IlSqueak 2 місяці тому

      @@brontewcat As a reasonably old Brit, I never understood why a 5p was a sixpence neither!!!
      Edit: Theres a comment below that mentions that a sixpence was worth 2 1/2p. Thank you (both of you) for making me feel young. Luckily, aged 3, I never had to worry about money pre-decimalisation.

  • @sextonblake4258
    @sextonblake4258 2 роки тому +27

    You missed the Ten Bob note.
    The reason for "nineteen and eleven" was NOT to make things look cheaper. It was to force the assistant to open the til and give change.
    Otherwise there was a risk that the sale would not get rung up and the pound would go into the assistant's pocket.

    • @artrandy
      @artrandy 2 роки тому +1

      I never knew that.......

    • @lindsayheyes925
      @lindsayheyes925 2 місяці тому

      Correct. Nowadays tax inspectors and accountants apply an analytical algorithm to CAID (CAsh In Drawer) to check for fraud through the statistical distribution of digits by order of magnitude (I can't recall its name). It was much quicker then if you priced everything a penny below the value of a coin or note.
      You didn't need a calculator, but before payment cards the bigger shops needed vaccuum tubes to deliver till clears to the Chief Cashier, and cash to the tills. Few people had bank accounts, so people were paid with cash (or a Postal Order that they could cash-in at a Post Office). On pay days, High Streets rang with the sound of trolleys of cash being pushed to and from the banks by the Cashiers' staff, guarded by ex-military Messengers, capped and in smart black and red uniforms. Smaller shops used Gladstone bags, chained to the Cashier or shop owner, but tradesmen might turn up atbthe bank with canvas coin-bags in a big biscuit-tin (no plastic bags then).

    • @Dee_Just_Dee
      @Dee_Just_Dee 2 місяці тому +3

      Weren't paying your cashiers enough, eh?

    • @alanbeaumont4848
      @alanbeaumont4848 2 місяці тому +3

      @@Dee_Just_Dee Still not.

    • @lindsayheyes925
      @lindsayheyes925 2 місяці тому

      @@Dee_Just_Dee Businesses were targetted for weaknesses, just as they are today. A friend of mine was in charge of the unit that tracked cashier fraud in one of our "big four" banks. He said that the underlying motivation was nearly always "fast women and slow horses".
      I got a really nice car for a good price. The previous owner was a local solicitor who'd been dipping into client accounts. He cheated not only families out of their inheritances, but destroyed the career prospects of his colleagues because nearly all the firm's clients left.
      NCP, when the biggest car park operator in the UK, was the victim of organised cashier theft. It was one of the biggest cases of theft by insiders in history. Another was at Blenheim Palace, when a family got control of their recruitment of cashiers.
      Berni Inns was built on portion control to reduce theft by staff. In catering and cash businesses, staff can be under extreme pressure from family members to routinely steal from their employers anf customers - it's just another form of coercive control - and it's not small beer.

  • @shabbapaul9983
    @shabbapaul9983 2 місяці тому +38

    I resisted I’m still resisting. I called my children Bob, Florin and Penny. I wouldn’t change them for the world

  • @hes_alive
    @hes_alive 3 роки тому +520

    Hilarious that there was a time that the US did things the most coherent way and many countries used them as a role model of standardization, that was very long ago. Now, I understand the Americans’ insistence of holding on to needlessly complicated systems because they feel the need to be SPECIAL! comes from.

    • @DaroriDerEinzige
      @DaroriDerEinzige 3 роки тому +5

      There was such a time?

    • @mabamabam
      @mabamabam 3 роки тому +3

      @@DaroriDerEinzige No

    • @TheRealHelvetica
      @TheRealHelvetica 3 роки тому +18

      Except American use a dozenal base system which is better for basic everyday measurements than decimal.
      But hey, I guess you must really enjoy a third of a kilometer being 333.3333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333… meters.

    • @mabamabam
      @mabamabam 3 роки тому +52

      @@TheRealHelvetica and you must really love 0.2 being almost but not quite 51/256.
      Base 12 is retarded. In everyday life you don't need the accuracy of that 4th decimal in 3.333 you complain about. and in anything where you do need numbers decimal is easier to calculate. There is zero downside to decimal.

    • @TheRealHelvetica
      @TheRealHelvetica 3 роки тому +9

      @@mabamabam can you even name an imperial unit?
      No because clearly you’re so uneducated you don’t even know that a foot is a third of a yard. 😏
      Enjoy your inferior commie units europoor.

  • @MrJacobThrall
    @MrJacobThrall 2 роки тому +94

    I wasn't born until after decimalisation, but still, I can see how you'd just be able to deal with it if that's the way it was. We count everything in base 10, but we use that counting system for our system of 60 seconds to a minutes, 60 minutes to an hour, 24 hours to a day. And 16 ounces to a pound, 14 pounds to a stone (used pretty much exclusively for bodyweight), but 20 fluid ounces to a pint. And buying fuel in litres but expressing fuel efficiency in miles per gallon. Buying spirits in 25ml or 35ml measures (instead of the old 1/6 or 1/5 of a gill), but beer and cider in pints. But wine in 125ml or 175ml glasses, from 750ml bottles. Bottled beer is in ml, so 330ml or 500ml usually, but sometimes 568ml so you get a pint. Wiring, hoses and pipes, nails and screws: in metres, centimetres and millimetres, but screws might well be in old imperial gauges too - it could be a 4mm or a #8, and it's probably labelled as both. It's probably badged as 25mm long, but it's also labelled as 1".
    That 50mm x 100mm timber is going to be referred to as 2"x4", regardless of what it actually measures, and of course we all think of ourselves in feet and inches, so our clothes are sized with inches round the waist and chest, and down the inseam. But if you buy fabric for making clothes it's sold by the metre.
    We spend our lives surrounded by a mish-mash of numerical conventions. £sd seems awkward, looking back, but did it seem unworkably complex when it was in use? No, not really. It was just the thing that you learned.

    • @thedativecase9733
      @thedativecase9733 2 роки тому +10

      You've put it very clearly - it was what people had to deal with so they got on with it. It's the same with English spelling - throughout my life I've heard experts telling us that it needs to be simplified and it's too difficult for people. Whereas most people - even not very well-educated people did a good job of grasping correct spelling. There seem to be more semi-literate English people now than when I was a kid despite having a supposedly better and longer education.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace 2 роки тому

      Originally the pint wa 16 oz.. This why it is in the US it was after 1776 That brittain changesd its meeasuring sustem tpo e even more confusing. Originally weighs asand vcolumes were in powers of 2

    • @aldomir
      @aldomir 2 роки тому +2

      And Boris (before he resigned) wanted to bring back imperial measurements to the nation! I know he's a barmpot anyway but it's a good thing he resigned when he did.

    • @CasperUK31
      @CasperUK31 2 роки тому +5

      Tire size has them both in together. A tire of size 205 55 16 is 205mm across, and 16 inches inner diameter.

    • @sniper0073088
      @sniper0073088 2 роки тому +2

      The imperial unit system is adequate for 18th century, but not for the 21st

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 2 місяці тому +101

    Canada introduced decimal currency in the 19th century (mainly to facilitate trade with the US). Australia decimalized in 1966 and New Zealand in 1967.

    • @fuzzyhair321
      @fuzzyhair321 2 місяці тому +6

      We also changed to the dollar away from the pound. Showing the changes towards the USA as well

    • @PrinceAlhorian
      @PrinceAlhorian 2 місяці тому +8

      We in South Africa saw the light in 1961, dropped the Pound for the Rand.

    • @MikeMan-q4v
      @MikeMan-q4v Місяць тому +2

      @@fuzzyhair321dollars are originally Spanish not American.

    • @fuzzyhair321
      @fuzzyhair321 Місяць тому +2

      @@MikeMan-q4v what? so what? that wasn't my point

  • @nojakthegemlad
    @nojakthegemlad 3 роки тому +49

    As someone who finds even the most basic of mental maths to be a challenge, I don't think I would have survived in pre-70s Britain, jeez.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 2 роки тому +4

      If you'd grown up with this system, it wouldn't have been so hard

    • @titanicbigship
      @titanicbigship 2 роки тому +2

      If you grow up with the system I think it would’ve been easy for you

    • @annoldham3018
      @annoldham3018 2 роки тому +1

      They are playing Scott Joplins strenuous life to this. I think it would be strenuous learning this.

    • @thedativecase9733
      @thedativecase9733 2 роки тому +1

      Yes you would. Kids practised these sums in school as part of their Maths lessons in junior school (age 7 - 11) and it became second nature. Most grown ups in the UK in those days left formal education at age 15, and got a job or an apprenticeship, the older ones had left at 14.If they could do it, you could have done it easily.

    • @66LordLoss66
      @66LordLoss66 Рік тому +2

      Maybe the reason why you have trouble with maths is because you grew up with decimal currency.

  • @stephenselby4252
    @stephenselby4252 2 місяці тому +135

    It was no problem. For two farthings I could get a ha’penorth of broken biscuits. I could change three pennies for a thrupenny bit. Two of those made a tanner and two tanners made a bob. Up the scale was a two bob coin, and add a tanner to that and you got half a crown. I don’t remember a lot of crowns around in my day, but if you could get two you could change them for a brown ten bob note. Two ten bob notes got you a quid and then if you saved up a bit you could trade up for a fiver. Doctor’s fees were in Guineas, which were a quid with one bob added on. Copper coins were always bits but sliver coloured ones were pieces. Hence “bits and pieces”.

    • @seanmcmichael2551
      @seanmcmichael2551 Місяць тому +14

      @stephenselby4252
      I never knew about "bits and pieces" before. Thanks for that nugget.

    • @georgesibley7152
      @georgesibley7152 Місяць тому +6

      But 2/6 was half a crown. or half a dollar. Doctors fees = you must be ancient if you paid these, they stopped in 1948 unless yyiu were rich and went rivate.

    • @drestonjclaw2839
      @drestonjclaw2839 Місяць тому +15

      Everything I just read sounded like gibberish…

    • @ekspatriat
      @ekspatriat Місяць тому

      Yep he didn't live with it and commented how crap it was...it wasn't ...he's full of sh....t.

    • @graemejwsmith
      @graemejwsmith Місяць тому +4

      Not sure about the "bits and pieces" (in Scotland).
      And yes you rarely say "Crowns". Towards the end of the old system - they tended to be struck as presentation coins. The last I am aware of was the 1965 "Churchill" commemorative.

  • @TurtleMarcus
    @TurtleMarcus 3 роки тому +101

    The only times I'v encountered the Guinea in my life, are in certain auction settings. A Guinea is £1.05, and those extra cents represents a 5% fee to the house. So if you win a rare coin for "2000 Guineas", you pay £2000 to the seller and an extra £100 to the house, for a total of £2100.

    • @tommmicron
      @tommmicron 3 роки тому +6

      Pence*, not cents

    • @19gregske55
      @19gregske55 2 роки тому +2

      I'd like to offer that Medical Doctors, Solicitors and Dentists would invoice in Guineas.
      Also, I think that the gold sovereign was a guinea.

    • @edwardblair4096
      @edwardblair4096 2 роки тому +5

      @@19gregske55 I think I heard that it was also used as a status symbol. Bespoke tailors and other high end shops would list their prices in Guineas. Buying something that was xx Guineas was automatically higher status than something priced in pounds.

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 2 роки тому +1

      Thoroughbred horses are valued in guineas still, I believe. You will see Britsh races classed as things like 20 guineas, trditionally.

    • @terenceretter5049
      @terenceretter5049 2 роки тому +2

      TurtleMarcus- I'm English and recall saying to a GI in 1965 that my suit cost £10/10/-( Ten pounds tenshillings) or ten guineas- he hit the roof as he was of Italian extraction and thought that I was calling him a Guinea- apparently an insult- at least at the time.

  • @PlayingGilly
    @PlayingGilly 2 місяці тому +6

    I remember when Ireland converted over from the Punt to Euros, there was a point in time where both prices were displayed, the government even sent out conversion calculators to every household.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo 2 місяці тому +3

      They did the same in Belgium, still have that calculator somewhere I think and also a little "magical " card where the numbers change depending on how you are holding the card.

  • @bastianfromkwhbsn8498
    @bastianfromkwhbsn8498 3 роки тому +181

    It wasn't that bad considering that back then no everyday item costs more than may be 1 pound. For comparison a new car was about 600 pound and a years wage less than 1000 pound in the 1970s and even less in earlier years. So you basically only used pence and shillings.

    • @UltimateDurzan
      @UltimateDurzan 3 роки тому +26

      @@kreuner11 Inflation's a bitch. Thats why,

    • @ALEXANDER1318
      @ALEXANDER1318 3 роки тому +29

      @@kreuner11 Abandoning the Gold standard, endless money printing causing mass inflation and also governments pretending they can control economies consisting of millions of people.

    • @Blackgriffonphoenixg
      @Blackgriffonphoenixg 3 роки тому +31

      @@ALEXANDER1318 you do realize the 1929 crash happened with the gold standard still in place, and also that there is not enough gold in our solar system to have the USD, let alone all other world currencies attach their value to that metal, right?

    • @ALEXANDER1318
      @ALEXANDER1318 3 роки тому +16

      @@Blackgriffonphoenixg Depends on how much value you want to give the USD. Remember that in those days, most people payed with penny's or dimes, with dollars only being for large expenses. All the inflation of the past 80 or so years would need to be undone, bit that'd be fine.

    • @NeverSaid-
      @NeverSaid- 3 роки тому +8

      @@Blackgriffonphoenixg you don't understand currency because you live in a world where money is paper that buys more paper than it's worth yet printing more is a life ruining crime.

  • @sarahwelively7506
    @sarahwelively7506 2 роки тому +15

    This is honestly a bop. 🎵🎶 8:07

  • @barteepage4109
    @barteepage4109 2 роки тому +52

    I have a few setting items which I require I make myself familiar with when I write any story:
    - Hard Cultural Taboos
    - Words that are non-existent in another language
    - Travel time (how long it takes to get to different places in the setting, and what can be used)
    - And Currency Understanding (Exchange rate, comparitve item value, how their currency works)
    Only five minutes in, and you've basically blacklisted an entire era of a country.
    Thanks.

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture 2 роки тому

      Or use bitcoin, worth 100 million satoshis. Only the satoshi matters, accepted worldwide, no banks, no exchanges, ever again.

    • @barteepage4109
      @barteepage4109 2 роки тому +8

      @@freeculture
      What I said has nothing to do with modern currency exchange.

  • @greenmanreddog
    @greenmanreddog 2 роки тому +40

    Fascinating. One minor correction... the sixpence was still valid currency post-decimalisation, it was worth 2.5p - until about 1980, when it was removed from circulation.
    I don't remember decimalisation, but I do remember the sixpence when I was a child in the 70s. It never dawned on me to ask why it was call a 'six'-pence when it was only worth 2.5p :-)

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 11 місяців тому

      Many were. The new nearest-equivalent are almost the same size, shape and weight. e.g. 5p (before 1990) and shilling, new 2p and old penny. Even the modern £1 is roughly the same size as the old Sovereign, which to this day has the nominal value of £1 (but being gold, has a much greater collectible and bullion valule).

    • @TillyOrifice
      @TillyOrifice 11 місяців тому

      In New Zealand, following decimalisation in 1967 it remained common to find an old shilling coin in your pocket change throughout the '70s and beyond, masquerading as a ten cent piece. Florins (20¢) were also quite common.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 11 місяців тому +1

      @@TillyOrifice Same here (UK). The old shilling was accepted as 10p until 1990 when the decimal 10p coin was changed to a different design, weight and size.

    • @jonwilliams75
      @jonwilliams75 Місяць тому

      ​@@dcarbs2979 The shilling's decimal value was 5p not 10p. And the shilling/5p were the same coin so were intended to be used as 5p.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Місяць тому

      @@jonwilliams75 But the 5p was half the size of the 10p. Yes, value-wise the shilling became 5p, having been 1/20th of a pre-decimal pound (12d). But coin-wise, the 10p was the shilling (I particularly remember it as I had 'magic' disappearing coin box made for the old shilling that fit the decimal 10p). The new 10p and old shilling (12d) are the same size. The difference did confuse me as a kid. It's only recently I found that a shilling was actually 12 pence rather than 5.
      In the same way that the decimal 2p is the same as the old pre-decimal penny and the new penny as the old ha'penny. Decimal coins are roughly double the face value of their equivalent pre-decimal coin.
      50p was not a direct replacement, as that would be the 10-shilling note. So the same is true: 50p is half a new pound, as 10 shilling is to the old. 20p is a brand new denomination introduced for the decimal era (1982). There is no pre-decimal 1/5th of a pound.

  • @LostsTVandRadio
    @LostsTVandRadio 2 роки тому +60

    Ha ha ... A fun little mockumentary!
    Actually I didn't find the pre-decimal system remotely difficult, nor did I find the switchover difficult. The only thing we can't do with a pound of 100 pence is divide it into as many fractions as we used to be able to do with the 240 penny pound. For example a third of a pound was a nice round six and eight ... now it's 33.3333 recurring pence.
    We still pack groceries in cartons of 6, 12 or 24. Before decimalisation it meant that we could convert from wholesale prices to retail unit prices extremely easily.

    • @Lily_The_Pink972
      @Lily_The_Pink972 Рік тому +5

      Nor can prices by increased by as little as one old penny ie 1/240th! The least a price can increase by today is 1p ie 1/100th, so a much bigger increase.

    • @LostsTVandRadio
      @LostsTVandRadio Рік тому +1

      Indeed!!@@Lily_The_Pink972

    • @joshuaduarte4505
      @joshuaduarte4505 2 місяці тому +3

      No not really. 1p is worth much less than a penny in the 60s isn’t it

    • @Dee_Just_Dee
      @Dee_Just_Dee 2 місяці тому

      @@Lily_The_Pink972 In this day and age where a simple candy bar costs you nearly a pound, I think it's really trifling for anybody to complain about differences less than a decimal pence.

  • @Bedinsis
    @Bedinsis 3 місяці тому +18

    Suddenly the money system in Harry Potter makes sense: it was a more extreme version of the UK of the past, thereby highlighting how wizarding society is bereft of magical technology.

    • @wetzel4806
      @wetzel4806 Місяць тому +1

      I think you give too much to JK, think it was just a mix of old style and some whimsy.
      If there were better divisions, I could see it, but hers is all odd numbered or indivisible.

  • @PK-mw7et
    @PK-mw7et Місяць тому +3

    Someone may have mentioned it in the comments already, but one advantage of the old system was you could dump a pile of “silver” coins on the bank tellers desk, and he could weigh the lot to get the total value. So a shilling weighed half of a florin, a sixpence was half of a shilling etc.
    And farthings were still in circulation much later than 1900….we used them at school in the 50s.

    • @ThomasstevenSlater
      @ThomasstevenSlater Місяць тому +1

      You can still do that with the copper coins a 2p weighs twice as much as a 1p.

  • @lukasoitzl133
    @lukasoitzl133 2 роки тому +91

    Fun fact: the guinea is still used in auctions today. The reason for that is that the price includes the fee for the auction house. A guinea is £1.05.
    Example: you buy a painting for 3000 guineas it comes to 3150 pounds which is the price you pay to the auction house.

    • @stevetaylor8698
      @stevetaylor8698 2 роки тому +9

      Except most auction houses these days charge 15% not 5%.

    • @thedativecase9733
      @thedativecase9733 2 роки тому +7

      Funnily enough the really posh shop in my home city, Manchester Kendal Milne used to price it's stuff in guineas. As my dad pointed out, it was a way of over-charging the rich and stupid while making them feel superior .

    • @jek__
      @jek__ 2 роки тому +8

      It's almost like the difference between a gigabyte (1000) and a gibibyte (1024). It's basically the same number plus an overhead fee :P. Except this difference is used to undersell people products they dont realize have less technical capacity than they say they do in common parlance

    • @calmeilles
      @calmeilles 2 роки тому +4

      Not the reason; there's an Article on Wikipedia which explains at length but briefly the value of gold grew faster than that of silver so the Guinea coin initially valued at £1 or 20 shillings varied, sometimes considerably. in 1717 is was formally set at 21 shillings and after the coin ceased to be struck in 1816 the Guinea remained as a unit of account.
      The Coinage Act 1816 replaced the Guinea coin with the sovereign, back at 20/- and slightly smaller so the gold content was, at least initially, equal to the value of the silver in 20 shilling coins but it also redefined the value of the Pound Sterling in terms of gold instead of silver which meant that fluctuations in the value of silver no longer affected its trading value and that silver coinage of lower purity could be struck without debasing their value.

    • @michaelblum4968
      @michaelblum4968 2 роки тому +4

      Prices in guineas were usual for expensive items before decimalization, such as luxury cars, racehorses, expensive rifles and shotguns, yachts, prizes at sporting events, art and expensive items at auctions, large amounts of land, rents and leases of properties in upper-class parts of cities, doctors' and other professionals' fees, tailored clothing and other things perceived as being "upper class". The abbreviation for an amount in guineas is a lower-case 'g'.

  • @adrianoconnor5929
    @adrianoconnor5929 3 роки тому +68

    The crown was generally a commemorative coin and wasn’t in general use. Would have been a 10/- note and a half crown??

    • @stephenmatura1086
      @stephenmatura1086 3 роки тому +14

      Ten bob notes were indeed very common. I'm surprised they were missed out from the video. Even the Beatles sang about Mean Mr Mustard keeping a ten bob note up his nose!

    • @chrisinnes2128
      @chrisinnes2128 3 роки тому

      Or 4 more half crowns

    • @YoloBagels
      @YoloBagels 3 роки тому +1

      Not true, British Crowns circulated very heavily in the UK up until the early 20th century.

    • @andrewforrest862
      @andrewforrest862 2 роки тому +3

      Yes, I never saw a crown in ciculation. Half crowns were substantial enough coins in size and weight to carry in your pocket.

  • @janmelantu7490
    @janmelantu7490 3 роки тому +44

    As much as I love 240 (it’s a Highly Composite Number, it makes 3rds, 4ths, and even 16ths and 24ths whole integers as opposed to 100 which only makes 4ths, 5ths, 10ths, and 25ths nice), once everyone was using £s instead of shillings as their default it gets quite unwieldy

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +4

      The number 240 still lives on in US nutrition labeling, with the standard "cup" being defined as 240 mL. (The traditional definition is 8 fluid ounces = 231/16 cubic inches, which works out to exactly 236.5882365 mL, but rounding it up to 240 is just so useful for fractions.)

    • @wscottwatson
      @wscottwatson 2 роки тому +10

      This is why, as a pre-decimalisation child in Scotland, we did our times tables up to 16!
      15 * 16 = 240

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 2 роки тому +1

      Now hear me out...
      120 pennies in a pound, 24 pounds for a... I dunno, you guys will have to come up with a new name...

  • @geraldwillan7286
    @geraldwillan7286 2 місяці тому +6

    As one who grew up in both South Africa and Australia I was interested in the names you gave for 'thripence' which in South Africa was always known as a 'tickey' whilst in Australia was know as a 'trey' bit. For the sixpence and the shilling I cannot remember the South African terminology for them but in Australia the sixpence was known a 'zac' and a shilling was known as a 'deener'.

    • @Australian_Made
      @Australian_Made Місяць тому

      Right up until
      1975, our local Milk Bar
      would still accept a sixpence piece
      as legal payment for an
      Icy Pole,
      which cost 5¢
      😆

  • @leehallam9365
    @leehallam9365 2 роки тому +8

    The premise of this video misses the point of why the old system was actually easier to use than a decimal system in an age before digital calculators. It's to do with splitting amounts up, a shilling made up of 12 pence can be divided in half, into thirds, quarters and 6ths without any messy fractions. A pound made up of 20 shillings or 240 pence can be divided by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 15, 16, 20, 24, 30, 40, 48, 60, 80, 120, that's 17 ways to split it without using fractions. 100 pennies can only be split 8 ways, because 240 is a bit of a magic number, it's not to do with it being bigger than a hundred, 250 can only be divided 7 ways. So in an age when a pound was a lot of money, and it had to be calculated in your head, it was a better system.

    • @howdoipickaname9815
      @howdoipickaname9815 Рік тому

      I mean, sure, it can be split up a lot more, but it takes more effort to remember all the ways you can split it

  • @badnewswade
    @badnewswade 3 роки тому +42

    It's so much worse than that - apparently "imperial" currency referes not to the old currency of the British Empire, but to the *Roman* empire, which we adopted. The Shilling is 5p, btw, because it is defined as 1 / 20th of a pound - 20p has nothing to do with it. If you go to other European countries, such as Spain, they'll have something similar; in Spain it was "veinte duros" (twenty shillings") to the, now defunct, *libra* (Roman pound).

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 2 роки тому +1

      The Portuguese pre-Euro coin was the escudo, a word derived from the Roman Latin scutum - shield. The Portuguese must have had big pockets.

    • @litterpicker1431
      @litterpicker1431 2 роки тому +4

      20p does, indeed, have nothing to do with it, and the coin was not introduced until 1982.

    • @charleslyster1681
      @charleslyster1681 2 роки тому +3

      Not true; ours was not the Roman system, though ‘d’ does stand for denarii and ‘L’ for Libra, it was introduced by king Offa in around 800AD. And Imperial System applies to units of measurement used in the British Empire, it was not used to refer to the currency.

  • @lazygazzzer
    @lazygazzzer 3 роки тому +40

    Different times, mate. You are looking at it from a modern perspective which was not there in those days. You might think people went off to the supermarket and spent most of their wages in one go on the weekly shop, but that never used to happen. There weren't any supermarkets and most people just went shopping around the local shops, and do it every day. They never spent more than a couple of bob in any of them. These would be like, the greengrocers, butchers, general dealers, confectioners shop, loads and loads of them. Nobody had fridges to stock-up, and they would just get what they needed for the day. Everything into a shopping basket - no plastic bags. Any one thing would generally cost a few pennies. You might find something priced up at say a shilling and sixpence for a certain weight, but what made the system work was that 12 pennies to a shilling, or 24 h'pennies to a shilling was easy to divide up. You could ask for a quarter of this or that, or a half, or if you wanted you could divide by 3 or 6 and still get a whole number out of it.
    The thing about guineas, as I understand it, was that the original gold coin was so pure that it had 25 carat of gold, rather than the usual 24. Time went on and it got jumped-on by the middle class and their professional jobs. So it was normal for a lawyer to charge in guineas and write it up in pounds. The shilling that they pocketed was their commission.
    Generally the reason why it looks so alien to people these days is because of inflation. The cost of things has been running out of control since decimalization. So you think in terms of pounds, and hundreds of pounds, whereas in those days it was pennies and shillings. After decimalization nobody had much of a clue what anything was worth any more. A shilling (12 pennies) now worth 10 pence? - so who nicked-off with the other 2 pence?
    Still though, I don't want a return to LSD. Those days are gone and it wouldn't make any sense to go back.

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 2 роки тому +10

      This is the problem with the younger generation - they view the past through todays' eyes and do not understand zeitgeist. The World was a different place back then alien to moden brains.

    • @terenceretter5049
      @terenceretter5049 2 роки тому +2

      Summed up very well lazygazzer.

    • @chrisinnes2128
      @chrisinnes2128 2 роки тому +5

      Sorry but a shilling is five pence not ten always was and still is

    • @lazygazzzer
      @lazygazzzer 2 роки тому +2

      @@chrisinnes2128 Heh Heh, yes you are right. I'm getting on now though, memory not so good. Never had much money in my pocket when I was younger though, a shilling was a rarity for me.

  • @admaneb
    @admaneb 2 місяці тому +5

    Well you have missed a few points that gen X experienced. 1 the old shillings and 2 shillings were in circulation for ages and worth 5 and 10p. The introduction of the round pound coin, the miniturisation of all coins

  • @halamish1
    @halamish1 2 роки тому +35

    As one who grew up in the UK in the 1940s - 1950s I can say that no-one had any problems with the pre-decimal currency
    We learnt the multiplication table up to 12X12 = 144
    We used to have mental arithmetic exercises involving the total cost of items costing pounds and shillings per pound weight
    Today most people can't get sums right even with a computer
    By the way, the crown coin did not exist (or was not in regular use)
    I never saw one. Perhaps it was only struck for commemorations

  • @edwardspalton6345
    @edwardspalton6345 2 роки тому +21

    On my first day as a pupil in a corn merchant’s office, the manager handed me a weighbridge ticket 5 tons 2 cwt ( hundredweights) 3 qur ( quarters) 1 stone ( 14 lb - pounds weight) @ £24 12 shillings and 6d ( six pence). “ What does it come to, boy?” He asked. When I asked for a piece of paper to work it out .” Lord love you, lad. What have they been teaching you all these years at school.” Actually they used a book of tables called a Ready Reckoner for those sort of calculations . The changeover came at a time of inflation and certainly speeded it up for smaller items. It wasn’t long before an item which had cost 6d ( six old pence) was 6p (six new pence) or nearly one shilling and two pence halfpenny in “real” money.

    • @roboftherock
      @roboftherock 2 роки тому +1

      240% inflation

    • @soylentgreenb
      @soylentgreenb Рік тому +4

      @@roboftherock If you look at any other country which didn't switch their currency in the 70's you'll find that over that decade the prices increased by about a factor 2-4. Which is about a 10-15% per year inflation on average. Pound decimalisation didn't cause this and blaming greedy grocery stores etc. is just another deflection of blame by the money printers and bank lenders who lent money into existence (yes, this is how it works; the bank doesn't have the money it lends you, but debt spends just like money).

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 6 місяців тому +1

      @@roboftherock *140% inflation

    • @roboftherock
      @roboftherock 6 місяців тому +1

      @@Anonymous-df8it I stand corrected. I'll put it down to a brain-glitch.

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 2 місяці тому

      Yeah, pretty sure only the British measure weight in stones.

  • @grolfe3210
    @grolfe3210 2 роки тому +30

    If anyone wonders how we coped, just remember that we currently have 60 seconds in a minute, sixty minutes in an hour, 24 hours in a day, two ways of showing the hours (2x12 or 24), 7 days in a week!! Weeks that do not fit into months or years, 28,29 30 or 31 days in a month and 365 or 366 days in a year.
    Somehow we manage to keep the time and date.
    Also computers manage to deal with all of this.

    • @toebs_
      @toebs_ 2 роки тому +2

      It is a common cause of problems for computers as well, because it is just so easy to miss a detail when making your own date calculation software (which you generally should not do in production, but some people still try)

    • @freedomjunkie7843
      @freedomjunkie7843 2 роки тому +2

      Ikr? What next - the campaign to decimalise Time?! :) :)

    • @TheGloriousLobsterEmperor
      @TheGloriousLobsterEmperor 2 роки тому +6

      @@freedomjunkie7843 Fun fact, *that's exactly what happened during the French Revolution.* The new republican French government demanded decimalisation of time including a new system of days, weeks and months. A day was now made up of 10 hours, which were made up of 100 minutes each, which were in turn made up of 100 seconds each. A week was 10 days, a month was 30 days, and there were still 12 months in a year. There were 5 extra days at the end of the year (6 on a leap year) that were reserved for celebration, mostly to sort out synchronicity. The calender started at Year I (they used Roman Numerals for most of it), 21 September 1792 which was the day the French Republic was proclaimed.
      The (as of writing this comment) date right now in Paris using the French Republican calender is the the year 230 (CCXXX) Republican, and it is Primidi 21st (décade 33) of the month of Thermidor. The time is 9h 94m 46s. In about 5 minutes it will become Duodi, the second day of the French Republican week.

    • @leswhynin913
      @leswhynin913 2 роки тому

      It's time for decimalized time

  • @horsfred
    @horsfred 16 днів тому +1

    Worth pointing out that the "crown" coin was EXTREMELY rare. To the extent that my grandmother told me it didn't exist. This means that there was a very common "half-crown" coin, representing the handy value of 2.5 shillings but no "crown" coin. Bonkers.

  • @kennethcarter3494
    @kennethcarter3494 2 місяці тому +35

    I was born in 1957 and I just about remember the Farthing (quarter penny) it went out of circulation in 1961. You very rarely saw a Crown coin. The one missing item from his list of coins and notes was the 10 bob note (10 shilling note).

    • @krzysztofkrowicki1312
      @krzysztofkrowicki1312 2 місяці тому +2

      Its beautiful there older users who still can share their stories.

    • @virgorising7388
      @virgorising7388 Місяць тому +1

      I loved the 10 bob note. It was red (pink).

    • @lukek1949
      @lukek1949 Місяць тому +1

      I found it quite neat to learn you needed 960 farthings to make 1 pound. Nearly 1000! Interestingly, the coins was about the same size as an American or Canadian 1 cent coin.

    • @raytrevor1
      @raytrevor1 Місяць тому +2

      I was born in 1949 and used farthings as a child, but I have never seen a Crown in circulation. Half Crowns were common, but never Crowns.

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 Місяць тому +1

      Last year farthings were ever minted was 1955. In 1962, they were declared to no longer be legal tender. I have some farthings I found at coin stores in their foreign coin bargain bin. Last type ever made had a wren on the reverse and the "young head" portrait of Elizabeth II.

  • @ArkadiBolschek
    @ArkadiBolschek 3 роки тому +87

    0:35 This makes it sound as if the British were the only ones ever to have such a complicated currency system, while everybody else worked with decimal currency for centuries. Not true: most countries' currency systems used to be as crazy as the British one; it's just that the British stuck to the old ways long after nearly everyone else had changed to more sensible systems.

    • @dinamosflams
      @dinamosflams 3 роки тому +7

      9:09

    • @jasonjack7349
      @jasonjack7349 3 роки тому +8

      Did you watch the video?

    • @nemrody7828
      @nemrody7828 3 роки тому +1

      @@jasonjack7349 doesn't change the fact that this is what the intro implies

    • @zalromir
      @zalromir 2 роки тому +2

      For example the Indian Rupee was divided into 16 annas, and the anna into 12 pies

  • @fawziekefli2273
    @fawziekefli2273 2 роки тому +7

    0:12 Fun Fact: a 34-year old Alec Guinness pre-Star Wars, looking years older than the the character he would play almost 30 years later, that of Obi-Wan Kenobi. He did his own makeup.

  • @israeldelarosa5461
    @israeldelarosa5461 3 роки тому +26

    I like that they didn’t change the Shilling to be 5 to a Pound. That way even with the Base 10 system, it remains 20 to a Pound. That’s nice.

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace 2 роки тому

      if they truely wanted to go decimal it should be 10 to a pound like ther American dime .

  • @phoenixlegionaire3868
    @phoenixlegionaire3868 2 місяці тому +19

    Livestock are still sold in Guineas today. The extra shilling is the auctioneers fee for the sale.

    • @terencejay8845
      @terencejay8845 Місяць тому

      Some horse-races are also known by their old prize money, 'The ten-thousand guineas'

  • @lilywhite1083
    @lilywhite1083 Рік тому +21

    Crowns weren't in circulation, as they were only special issues. We also had a ten shilling note. It wasn't that difficult, anyway. Old coins were accepted for several months after D-day, but change was always given in new money.

  • @dieuitlander
    @dieuitlander 20 днів тому +1

    As an elderly Englishman who was brought up in the days of predecimal currency, I would like to make a few comments, if I may, some of which have already been touched on by other viewers.
    1. Firstly, I think the "difficulty" of the pre- decimal British currency is exaggerated.
    It was certainly no harder than other parts of the Imperial system (that is still in use in the USA. If one was brought up with it, it was easy. Even as small children not yet at school, we would know what "half a crown" was, and know exactly how far our sixpence a week pocket money would stretch.
    On the other hand, we were well into primary school before we would know how many acres there were in a square mile, and probably in secondary school before we learned how much a nautical mile, or a barrel of oil was, or that American gallons, barrels or (short) "tons" were different to our own.
    Of course, in those days we had no personal computers, pocket calculators or mobile telephones, we learnt multiplication tables at school, and we had mothers at home to teach us useful things, so maybe we were a bit more adept at mental arithmetic that the current generation of kids.
    2. While the difficulties of the old system are emphasised, the advantages are often overlooked. The biggest advantage of the British predecimal system was divisibility.
    Unlike the Decimal system, which is only divisible by multiples of 2 or 5, the pound, being comprised of 240 pence, could be divided by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 or 10 While still coming out with a whole number of pence. Try dividing a dollar between three people so that each one gets an equal share.
    3. Personally, I have never heard of a halfpennyworth being pronounced "haipth", and I went to several countries during the time they were using predecimal currency.. The usual abbreviations were "heypney's worth" or "ha'p'orth" (As in the well known proverb "Don't spoil a ship for a ha'p'orth of tar", meaning don't spoil a job by false economies or skimping on materials) Of course, English is famous for its many dialects, so I can't rule out the possibility that "Haipths" may have been used somewhere. Yorkshire, perhaps?
    4 You were somewhat dismissive of the Guinea, relating how in recent times it has come to represent 21 shillings, leading shops to quote prices in guineas rather than pounds in order to gain an extra 5%. That is true enough since the Guinea was demonetized in the early 19th Century. But that was at the end of its long and illustrious history. In the early modern period, the Guinea, so named because it was originally minted from West African gold, was England's (later Great Britain's) original gold coin, preceding the gold Sovereign by about two centuries, and, with the growth of British trade, it became a very prestigious coin. Also, since, the value of the pound was based on a set amount in British (silver) currency, but the Guinea was minted from one ounce of pure gold. in its heyday, the value of the Guinea would fluctuate against the Pound, depending on the relative values of gold and silver. That facilitated trade by allowing British merchants to trade in either silver-based Pounds or golden Guineas. At the time the Guinea was demonetized, the value of the Guinea was somewhere near 21 shillings, so the amount of 21 shillings became popularly known as "a guinea". However, actual gold Guineas (which are still minted to this day) are now considered as "bullion coins" and collectors items (like the modern day South African "Krugerrand") and if you wanted to buy one it would cost you a hell of a lot more than 21 shillings.
    (another comment coming)

  • @adiuntesserande6893
    @adiuntesserande6893 3 роки тому +28

    If you’re wondering why it was called ‘decimalization’ when decimal means base ten, given that a pound is actually base 100, the answer lies in the United States, where the system is in fact broken up into tens. The dollar isn’t technically broken up into 100 cents, it’s broken into ten dimes, each then broken further into ten cents. (Look at a US dime. You’ll see that it’s denominated as ‘One Dime’ rather than ‘Ten Cents’.) Indeed, the US system has a rank below the cent (the mill) and one above the dollar (the eagle).

    • @voxelfusion9894
      @voxelfusion9894 3 роки тому +17

      Eagle, eh? The ultimate freedom coin haha.

    • @ffwast
      @ffwast 3 роки тому +6

      Mills are still used on paper for a few things like taxes, but I'm sad to say I have yet to see eagles in use

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +9

      @@ffwast : Eagles ($10) were gold coins, so removed from circulation by Executive Order 6102 in 1933.

    • @ffwast
      @ffwast 3 роки тому +7

      @@danielbishop1863 it's still not used in finances or even as a colloquialism and that makes me sad

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 2 роки тому +1

      @@ffwast Also for gas taxes, or is that just to hide prices?

  • @markpickering5133
    @markpickering5133 3 роки тому +30

    Interesting. You forgot the ten shilling note. Crowns were rarely used or seen. Some farthings were used into the late 1950s in sweet shops and stuff ( I remember seeing them ) but they weren't legal tender. I had quite a large collection of farthings.

  • @andrewcomerford9411
    @andrewcomerford9411 2 роки тому +40

    Old 1/- and 2/- coins continued until just after the introduction of the 20p, and were used interchangeably with 5p and 10p coins until the latter were reduced in size (both events in the late '80s).
    You missed the 10/- note replaced earlier (late '60s) with the large 50p - replaced with a smaller version in the early '90s.
    Oh and the old 6d (Tanner) continued in use (21/2p) until the demise of the 1/2p.
    In Scotland, it's still common to refer to 50p as, "Ten Bob."

    • @Cosford869
      @Cosford869 2 роки тому +5

      Actually, the 1/- circulated as 5p until 31st December 1990 and the 2/- was in circulation until 30th June 1993. The reduced size 50p entered circulation on 1st September 1997.

    • @philiprice7875
      @philiprice7875 2 роки тому +2

      i still call it a "ten bob bit"
      and our local buses i shocked some older people when i say the fare is 50shilling because 50 shillimg could buy a weeks food shopping for our family

    • @melyvaldez3311
      @melyvaldez3311 2 роки тому

      Ten bob note ceased as legal tender 20h November 1970

    • @baldyhead
      @baldyhead 2 роки тому +1

      The ha'penny went in 84; the tanner went in 80.
      I still have a collection of most of the old coins, except the sovereign, which I never had as I was just a child pre decimalisation.

    • @MarkPMus
      @MarkPMus Рік тому +1

      And the video incorrectly assumed that the 20p coin was introduced at the same time as the new decimal coins, ie 15/2/1971. In fact it wasn’t introduced until the early 80s, around 1982, IIRC. I think that “Granny Gets The Point”, the information film shown repeatedly on TV during 1970/71, would’ve been improved if they’d pointed out the 1,2,5 pattern of the coins & notes. The ½p and lack of 20p threw out the system a bit, but essentially we have (or had), ½p, 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2 (again not a thing in the 1970s), £5, £10, £20, £50. All numbers divisible by 10 or 100. As I said on this video a year ago, there were far more ways to equally divide up 240. The video is unfairly biased towards how complicated it was pre-20th century. In the 60s just before the change (forgive the pun) the number of coins was far more manageable and a bit more logical than the video makes out. The puzzle would’ve been far easier to solve if they’d included the 10 shilling note, and the £5 note in our options to choose from. It took me a few minutes to do the addition, but I did it, and got it right.

  • @mpwheatley
    @mpwheatley Місяць тому +1

    I was born in February 1971 and grew up with decimal coins, although there were a couple of exceptions. One thing you didn't mention was that the old shilling and two shilling coins were still in circulation until the early 90s as they were the same size as the 5p and 10p coins. When they halved the size of the 5p & 10p coins they removed all coins of the old size in 1990 and 1992 respectively. Strange the 2p is still the size it is, it hasn't changed since 1971 and is very big for its value.

  • @jannepeltonen2036
    @jannepeltonen2036 2 роки тому +5

    I learned about this in a footnote in a Terry Pratchett book, where the punchline was ""people resisted the decimal system because they thought it was too complicated".

  • @MarkPMus
    @MarkPMus 3 роки тому +61

    The old LSD system was far more logical than this video makes out. In 1970, spending £1 was the equivalent of spending roughly £20 today. So you and a few mates have been out for a sandwich and you decide to split the bill evenly. £1 for the 1970 lunch and £20 for 2021. There are many more ways of evenly splitting 240p than 2000p. I admit that the old money was more complicated but there was method in the madness. By the way the person queuing up for 2 items totalling over 9 quid was spending half of a good earner’s weekly salary, so they were probably splurging on Gucci.

    • @fren-esque
      @fren-esque 3 роки тому +8

      This

    • @InvestmentJoy
      @InvestmentJoy 2 роки тому +4

      @TacticalMoonstone even in the US at one time we had half pennies, pennies (still do), two cent and three cent denominations.

    • @mae8646
      @mae8646 2 роки тому

      @@InvestmentJoy I heard in the next few years that the US government is gonna phase out pennies, too

    • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
      @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive 2 роки тому

      Mae Big zinc and charities are against phasing out pennies.

    • @ThomasSorensen1
      @ThomasSorensen1 2 роки тому +7

      I really don't follow your example. The old system wasn't as illogical as it seems because.... inflation? Me and 3 mates splitting £20 is just £5 each. Not complicated. Splitting £1/240p is 60p each. Also not so complicated...

  • @austintodd5356
    @austintodd5356 3 роки тому +21

    Just to show how slow the British were at that switch, the Canadians switched to dollars in 1867. More then a century before the English. Literally the moment the Canadian colony’s combined they said “screw this” and swapped

    • @리주민
      @리주민 2 роки тому

      Hmm. I thought Canada had pounds til the early 20th century...
      Looked up and it was replaced in 1858. Thank you for giving me the question to research.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 роки тому +3

      British and English are not the same thing

    • @oldschoolbriton8504
      @oldschoolbriton8504 2 роки тому +1

      You don't think proximity to the US and trade with them had much more to do with it than the juvenile bigotry you express?
      The separate colonies (eg: Nova Scotia or Upper Canada) had "dollars" before Confederation.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 роки тому

      Britain still uses pounds not dollars only they are decimalised pounds

  • @DIEGhostfish
    @DIEGhostfish 2 місяці тому +5

    5:05 All that mental work kept the brits sharp for empire building clearly!

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock Місяць тому +1

      But not much else. Like cooking.

    • @DIEGhostfish
      @DIEGhostfish Місяць тому +2

      @@Anvilshock British cooking is pretty great, pre ww2.

    • @jimmoynahan9910
      @jimmoynahan9910 Місяць тому

      @@DIEGhostfish It literally still is.

    • @DIEGhostfish
      @DIEGhostfish Місяць тому

      @@jimmoynahan9910 True, but rationing brought in a lot of dumb ideas that never quite went away.

  • @petersmythe6462
    @petersmythe6462 3 роки тому +40

    Americans: "Half penny worth."
    British: "Haipth."
    The Queen's English is just as bad as her currency lol.

    • @ffwast
      @ffwast 3 роки тому +2

      Frankly the queen should keep it to herself.

  • @johnnyzeee5215
    @johnnyzeee5215 2 роки тому +4

    1964 - " Goldfinger " - Sean Connery and Gert Frobe. Wagering on their golf game at Stoke Poges :" ...shall we make it a shilling a hole ? "

  • @tonydavies1935
    @tonydavies1935 2 роки тому +26

    In my time (growing up in the fifties and sixties) the Crown (five shillings, not ten) wasn't really used in commerce. It was only struck as a ceremonial, to commemorate Churchill on his death for instance, and it was b-i-g. Other problems with the predecimal coinage were that the coins were way too large; they pulled your coin-side trouser pocket half way down your butt. And there was no logic to the size of the various coins. You had to pull a handful out of your pocket and pick through to see what you'd got. Easier to hand over a pound or ten shilling note and receive even more oversized, useless coins in change.

    • @seanhartnett79
      @seanhartnett79 2 роки тому

      lol. True

    • @helenbenjafield7351
      @helenbenjafield7351 2 роки тому +1

      Money did go further prior to decimalisation when it started in 1968,so you didn't have to carry so much.

    • @donatist59
      @donatist59 2 роки тому

      Even in the 🇺🇸 where our currency supposedly makes sense, the 5c piece is significantly larger than the 10c piece. Indeed the 10c piece is the smallest American coin.

    • @donatist59
      @donatist59 2 роки тому

      @Steve L That actually makes sense! Thanks.

    • @taoliu3949
      @taoliu3949 2 роки тому

      @@donatist59 American Coins used to be minted in silver, and would carry their weight in silver. If you have a pile of dimes, quarters, and halves you can calculate their value simply by weighing them.
      There used to be a half dime coin that was exactly half the weight of a dime, but it was replaced by the nickel during the Civil War. Likewise, the old dollar coins were double the weight of the halves until they were replaced by the smaller Susan B Anthony dollars in 1979.

  • @charlescedricryder
    @charlescedricryder 2 місяці тому +1

    Boomer here. It wasn't a nightmare, it was a lot of fun and made the British (and people in the empire (commonwealth)) very numerate. We were still calling the 50p ten bob in the eighties.

  • @trevordance5181
    @trevordance5181 2 роки тому +41

    I was born in 1955 and so brought up with £"s"d. It was easy to understand because you were so used to it. I could add up different amounts of the old money in my head with ease, still could. I reckon the average person was much more proficient in mental arithmetic back then compared to now as all imperial measurements made you use your brain more.

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 2 роки тому +7

      We went around with an album of monarchs from Queen Victoria to the present Queen. Back then I knew the line of succession because of the coins, mainly the old pennies.

  • @MeStevely
    @MeStevely 2 роки тому +8

    We didn't stand in a queue doing mental arithmetic adding the items we were buying, that was the checkout's job. Just as it is today. £9-12-9? Simple just hand over two fivers or a ten pound note, and you got change. Sorted.
    It really wasn't as difficult as was made out to be in this video - but of course he obviously wasn't around at the time. He got loads of stuff wrong.

    • @RobT-sv6cd
      @RobT-sv6cd 8 місяців тому +2

      Yes, he did get loads of stuff wrong!

    • @chrisinnes2128
      @chrisinnes2128 3 місяці тому +1

      Also £9/12/9

  • @zalromir
    @zalromir 2 роки тому +17

    We grew up with the old system; and it presented no problem to us - in fact the £sd structure made change-giving simple. It was neither a nightmare in the pocket, nor a ridiculous counting system. But I don't expect modern people to understand that, or agree with it.

    • @awestruckbeaver3344
      @awestruckbeaver3344 2 роки тому +1

      Could you explain the counting system to us youngun's then?
      I'm on fence understanding it from both sides

    • @zalromir
      @zalromir 2 роки тому +3

      @@awestruckbeaver3344 It sounds difficult to anyone who is used to nothing but decimal money and metrics. A penny was divided into four farthings (the farthing disappeared after the war) and two halfpennies (or ha'pnys). The halfpenny lasted until decimalisation. You would rarely have more than one halfpenny in your pocket. The shilling contained twelve pennies, and you had coins for 3d and 6d as well as the 1d. Money sums had three columns (£, s and d). You would add up the pennies and for each twelve add 1s to the shillings column. Adding the shillings you would add £1 for each 20 to the £ column.

    • @awestruckbeaver3344
      @awestruckbeaver3344 2 роки тому +3

      @@zalromir thank you for the clarification. This video has spurred me to look into this more and make videos on the coins themselves

    • @zalromir
      @zalromir 2 роки тому +1

      @@awestruckbeaver3344 You could probably find an old school arithmetic book with plenty of examples if you wanted to try some. In shops and restaurants you'd find the staff accustomed to tot up bills mentally - fewer figures and smaller numbers - than their equivalents on the continent who'd use pencil and paper (long before calculators, of course). We used to do a lot of mental arithmetic in junior school.

    • @awestruckbeaver3344
      @awestruckbeaver3344 2 роки тому +2

      @@zalromir I will admit it gets easier once you start doing it more often. Problem theses days is that we're taught metric in schools but then everything in the real world is imperial. Like I cannot work out weight of someone in kilos it has to be in stone but sugar is in kilos not pounds 😵‍💫
      Wish the government would just either say we are going full on Imperial or metric not this hybrid system we have at the moment

  • @MrJohndoakes
    @MrJohndoakes Місяць тому +1

    Monty Python had a sketch ("New Brain from Currys") which used the old currency and there is an on-screen note "sketch written before decimalization". The episode was recorded in 1972 but not aired until early in 1973.

  • @drecksaukerl
    @drecksaukerl 2 місяці тому +4

    My German parents worked in Britain in the early 50s. Having to learn this and Imperial measurements at the same time drove them bonkers. Good video.

  • @benfidar
    @benfidar 3 роки тому +15

    Not just Britain. Before the French Revolution, everywhere. It does have advantages in societies that really only ever used pennies, and rarely shillings (and almost never pounds). Accountants often used regularized moneys of account that did not actually exist and other moneys were translated by their bullion value, which could fluctuate over time. Very clever.

  • @MrDavidht
    @MrDavidht 2 роки тому +16

    The old 1/- was retained as a 5p coin, ie 20 to the £ and the florin ie 2/- piece was 10p. The 20p piece is a post decimilisation creation.

    • @donatist59
      @donatist59 2 роки тому +3

      As an American who has lived in the UK I always found the 20p coin funny because the dollar is divided into four 25c pieces rather than five 20c pieces.

    • @taoliu3949
      @taoliu3949 2 роки тому

      @@donatist59 Only America uses a 25 unit coin. It's a form of fractional currency where everything was divided. You have Halves, Quarters, and Dimes (which meant literally 1/10th). There used to be a half dime coin worth 5 cents, but it was eventually replaced by the nickel during the Civil War.

    • @TonyAquino2023
      @TonyAquino2023 Рік тому +1

      @@donatist59 The US also once had a 20-cent coin in its history. The 25-cent of the US was based on the division of the Spanish dollar that was used by the first 13 states alongside £sd before the US dollar became the official currency in the early 1790s. The 20-cent coin was short-lived. The US uses 25-cent coin but doesn't have a 2-cent coin. The denominations of the currencies in Europe are 50 cents, 20, cents, 10 cents, 5 cents, 2 cents and 1 cent.

  • @julianbassett5172
    @julianbassett5172 2 роки тому +4

    It was actually dead simple and not confusing at all.

  • @cynthiaalver
    @cynthiaalver Місяць тому +2

    I was very excited to see this video. I have wondered many times over the years about the old British coin system (my affinity for British TV shows). Well, I've always considered myself a relatively capably intelligent person, but, I have to admit, this whole video could have been done in Swahili instead of English because my eyeballs were rolling around in my head in stark confusion and I never did understand it. Glad to have you with us on the dark side, cousins!

  • @Jeffron71
    @Jeffron71 3 роки тому +12

    The shilling and two shilling coins remained in common use alongside 5p's and 10p's (which they were the same size as) up until the early nineties when they replaced all the coins with smaller versions.

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 3 роки тому +5

      Also, the sixpence was allowed to stay in circulation (at an awkward value of 2.5p) until 1980.

    • @sambda
      @sambda 2 роки тому

      Only the 5p, 10p and 50p changed in the 1990s. The others from D-Day (1p and 2p) stayed the same size, as did ones introduced since then (20p, £1).

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
    @rightwingsafetysquad9872 2 місяці тому +8

    As an American, its not that the metric system or decimal systems are complicated. It's that I remain entirely unconvinced that it's better. Unit conversions are easier, great, the last time I had to do that was 3rd grade math class.

    • @Meight50five
      @Meight50five 2 місяці тому +2

      Exactly

    • @skywindow6764
      @skywindow6764 Місяць тому

      Okay, then miss another Mars with your rockets

    • @Meight50five
      @Meight50five Місяць тому

      @@skywindow6764 try even getting within their orbiting range, then you can run your mouth.