Northern Ireland did not exist in the 1890s, as it was only created in 1922 when it was partitioned from the rest of Ireland. In the 1890s, all of Ireland was part of the British Empire and so would have used the pound sterling.
no northern Ireland's currency runs on pound, but you can still use euro in northern Ireland's
The currency of Northern Ireland is UK currency. The pound stirling
Derry is in Northern Ireland where the pound sterling is the currency.
In the Rupublic of Ireland the currency is the EURO, and in Northern Ireland (UK) the Pound Sterling is the currency
No. Northern Ireland uses Sterling and the Republic of Ireland uses the Euro.
No. The currency of the Republic of Ireland is the Euro (EUR or €). The currency of Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK, is the British Pound (GBP or £). Generally the Euro is not accepted in Northern Ireland, although some large shops and some shops near the border with the Republic of Ireland will accept it.
Its Euro because it is in the Republic of Ireland, not Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland does not use the Euro. Northern Ireland and England use the same currency, which is Sterling. So there is no conversion rate.
The language is English and the currency is the pound Sterling.
republic of ireland = euro northern ireland= pound sterling
The currency of Northern Ireland is the British Pound Sterling. Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom, so uses the same currency. Besides this, proximity to the Republic of Ireland may mean the Euro is accepted in some places. An Irish passport is accepted in Northern Ireland and vice versa, so employment opportunities across the border (as per EU directives) would mean that currency changing would be simplified by accepting the Euro.
The Republic of Ireland uses the Euro. Northern Ireland uses Sterling. It is because Northern Ireland is under British rule and so it uses the British currency.