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Back In The Day. Why Were Items Priced In Guineas.
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Looking back at adverts from the 50's and 60's and further back. I noticed items (especially luxury items) priced in Guineas. A Guinea being 21 shillings (£1.05). Does anyone know why that came about. I believe there hasn't been a Guinea coin in circulation for years so why were some things priced like that. Also is there any connection between the coins and the African country.
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http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Guinea _%28Bri tish_co in%29
I copied it from the wikipedia page without the http bit but it reappears when I paste it- so i can't work out what's going wrong from margo
Have another try margo- right click on the address bar showing the page address, copy it and then paste it into here
I copied it from the wikipedia page without the http bit but it reappears when I paste it- so i can't work out what's going wrong from margo
Have another try margo- right click on the address bar showing the page address, copy it and then paste it into here
In the Chrome browser, when you copy the whole URL it always includes the http part (which it doesn't show but does copy). I don't think all browsers do that. So if you're using Chrome, chances are you will copy and paste a URL that will translate into a link on AB without even trying, whereas with other browsers you may have to try harder.
The sovereign made from gold from guinea in 1717
was devalued and the way they did that was to say that the coin exchangeable for 20s was now to be changed at 21s
which would be a 5% devlauation
sovereigns made after that - from other gold were still to be worth 20s
and yes auctions houses used to operate in guineas
You could write a cheque in guineas - the short form was gns
the number had to be in pounds-shillings and pence
was devalued and the way they did that was to say that the coin exchangeable for 20s was now to be changed at 21s
which would be a 5% devlauation
sovereigns made after that - from other gold were still to be worth 20s
and yes auctions houses used to operate in guineas
You could write a cheque in guineas - the short form was gns
the number had to be in pounds-shillings and pence
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