As of 31 July 2014, 1.00 British Pounds is worth about 1.69 US Dollars.
The Danish 5 Kroner coin is worth $0.97. The Norwegian 5kr is worth $0.88.
£25
worth in england 10 p
87 cents in US curency
Assuming it's from circulation, £1.
The currency of the Kingdom of England in 1700 was the Pound Sterling - exactly the same currency as the UK has now. Well, not quite the same. Today's pound has decimal sub-units. Before that, there were many different non-decimal fractions of a pound as well as there being the guinea (a gold coin worth 1.05 pound), which had its own array of sub-units. Also, there was no pound coin. The largest in that era was only 1/4 of a pound
There is no such thing - the British currency is the Pound, the Spanish currency was Pesetas until the Euro.
The currency of the UK (which includes England), is the pound sterling (£)(GBP). Dollars and cents aren't used.
A coin collector would pay more than £5 for the coin, if it was uncirculated and in Mint condition, or a Proof coin. However if you were to go into a bank and exchange the coin for other currency, they would only give you the face value of £5's worth.
It's worth exactly one pound.
The One Pound coin replaced the One Pound note in the British currency in 1983. Pound coins include the One Pound and Two Pound coins, and the Five Pound coin which is issued as a commemorative but is still legal tender.
Currently, British general circulation currency comes in the following denominations - 1 Penny coin 2 Pence coin 5 Pence coin 10 Pence coin 20 Pence coin 50 Pence coin 1 Pound coin 2 Pound coin 5 Pound note 10 Pound note 20 Pound note 50 Pound note
If you refer to currency, it would possibly refer to the first of a type or issue of Pound coin or banknote.
A 1889 gold 5 pound coin is worth 5 pounds of gold, while a 1889 2 pound gold coin is only worth 2 pounds of gold.
Gibraltars currency is the Pound Sterling, but they mint their own coins. Gibraltars currency is legal tender only in Gibraltar.
The Pound Sterling varies depending on which bank makes it. The Bank of England is most common in England. The following formation pertains to the Bank of England Pound Sterling: Queen Elizabeth II is on the obverse side of every coin and note. The reverse sides vary.
A florin is another term for a pre-decimal British coin worth two shillings or ten new pence, another term for a guilder, the former currency of the Netherlands, or the currency of Aruba, divided into 100 cents.