Nobody invented it. The traditional English coins were originally based on those current in the Dark Ages in western Europe.
The currency unit in England is the Pound Sterling The currency unit in England is the Pound Sterling
about 65 times -check hansard.millbanksystems.com/written.../pound-sterling-value
Ireland at this point was still British, so the currency was the Pound Sterling.
UK Currency is the £. The Pound.
Same thing they use today, the Pound Sterling. Also called the Pound, Quid, or Sterling.
Pound Sterling is the currency of the UK.
Yes, it is allied to the Pound Sterling.
It uses the Pound Sterling.
One pound sterling is worth one pound sterling, surprisingly enough.
261.67 British Pound Sterling
990.2 Pound Sterling.
The pound sterling, or in financial markets it's known as GBP which is the abbreviation of Great British Pound.
No difference, they are both the same. A pound is just a shortened version of pound sterling.
Rs 2.25 lakh is what in pound sterling
Derry is in Northern Ireland where the pound sterling is the currency.
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.
sterling is always higher than dollar. What is the difference between sterling and pound?