1 pound sterling
One pound sterling is worth one pound sterling, surprisingly enough.
The pound sterling is a coin minted by the Royal Mint. One bank in Scotland issues a One Pound note.
The currency of Scotland is British Pounds Sterling. The three Scottish commercial banks are licensed to print their own notes but Bank of England banknotes are also legal tender north of the border.
Scotland, in common with the rest of the UK uses Pound Sterling (GBP) divided into 100 pennies (or pence). Scotland uses banknotes issued by three different commercial banks;- Royal Bank of Scotland, Bank of Scotland and the Clydesdale Bank. Bank of England banknotes are rarely accepted in Scotland.
The pound sterling (GBP) (£) is the official currency of England and Wales and is the commonly accepted currency of Scotland and Northern Ireland. The pound sterling is contolled by the UK central bank, the Bank of England and is issued in banknotes by eight issuing banks in the United Kingdom and lower denominations in coins by the Royal Mint.
The 1984 Royal Bank of Scotland One Pound note features Edinburgh Castle on the reverse and the Royal Bank of Scotland coat of arms on the front. No faces.
The Pound (£) Sterling. The pound is the basic unit of money in Great Britain and Northern Ireland; equal to 100 pence (p). The Royal Mint produce the coins 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2. The Bank of England produce the banknotes £5, £10, £20, £50.
No. The Royal Bank of Scotland is the only bank in Scotland which still issues the £1 note, and this has been the case for many years. The Bank of Scotland and Royal Bank of Scotland are two separate banks.
One Dollar = 0.492523 pounds (Scottish same as Brittish)
usually about 10 pound
The currency of Scotland is the Pound Sterling (GBP) and Scotland uses British coins as produced by the Royal Mint. All Scottish banks have the right to produce their own banknotes, but only three do. Strangely, all Scottish banknotes are not legal tender anywhere including Scotland. They have more of the standing of a promissory note (in Scotland) and there is a strange legal loop hole in Scottish law that allows this to occur.
Scottish banknotes are not legal tender anywhere in the UK including Scotland, where the have the status of a Prommissory note. The Royal Bank of Scotland is the only bank still producing a One Pound note in Scotland. The notes are acceptable in Scotland. There is an agreement in place between banks, and the Scottish One Pound note should be accepted by English banks, but might be accepted by business and trades people in England.