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Penny

A penny is a coin (PL: pennies) or a unit of currency (PL: pence) in various countries. Borrowed from the Carolingian denarius (hence its former abbreviation d.), it is usually the smallest denomination within a currency system. Presently, it is the formal name of the British penny (abbr. p) and the de facto name of the American one-cent coin (abbr. ¢) as well as the informal Irish designation of the 1 cent euro coin (abbr. c). Due to inflation, pennies have lost virtually all their purchasing power and are often viewed as an expensive burden to merchants, banks, government mints and the public in general.

A 1911 Australian penny (top). Coin of Eric Bloodaxe (bottom) with legend reading Eric Rex ("King Eric")

Penny is also the informal name of the cent unit of account in Canada, although one-cent coins were removed from circulation in 2012.[1] Similarly, Australian one-cent coins were withdrawn from circulation in 1992 and New Zealand one-cent coins were demonetised in 1990.

The name penny is also used in reference to various historical currencies, also derived from the Carolingian system, such as the French denier and the German pfennig. It may also be informally used to refer to any similar smallest-denomination coin, such as the euro cent or Chinese fen.

The Carolingian penny was originally a 0.940-fine silver coin, weighing 1240 pound. It was adopted by Offa of Mercia and other English kings and remained the principal currency in Europe over the next few centuries, until repeated debasements necessitated the development of more valuable coins. The British penny remained a silver coin until the expense of the Napoleonic Wars prompted the use of base metals in 1797. Despite the decimalization of currencies in the United States and, later, throughout the British Commonwealth, the name remains in informal use.

No penny is currently formally subdivided, although farthings (14d), halfpennies, and half cents have previously been minted and the mill (110¢) remains in use as a unit of account in some contexts.

Etymology Edit

 
 
 
From top to bottom: a penny depicting King Offa of Mercia; a 1929 South African penny; a 2013 one-cent coin from the United States (colloquially called a penny). Worth 1100 of 1 USD (US Dollar). As a decimal, it is written as $0.01.

Penny is first attested in a 1394 Scots text,[n 1] a variant of Old English peni, a development of numerous variations including pennig, penning, and pending.[n 2] The etymology of the term "penny" is uncertain, although cognates are common across almost all Germanic languages[n 3] and suggest a base *pan-, *pann-, or *pand- with the individualizing suffix -ing. Common suggestions include that it was originally *panding as a Low Franconian form of Old High German pfant "pawn" (in the sense of a pledge or debt, as in a pawnbroker putting up collateral as a pledge for repayment of loans); *panning as a form of the West Germanic word for "frying pan", presumably owing to its shape; and *ponding as a very early borrowing of Latin pondus ("pound").[3] Recently, it has been proposed that it may represent an early borrowing of Punic pn (Pane or Pene, "Face"), as the face of Carthaginian goddess Tanit was represented on nearly all Carthaginian currency.[4] Following decimalization, the British and Irish coins were marked "new penny" until 1982 and 1985, respectively.

From the 16th century, the regular plural pennies fell out of use in England, when referring to a sum of money (e.g. "That costs tenpence."), but continued to be used to refer to more than one penny coin ("Here you are, a sixpence and four pennies."). It remains common in Scottish English, and is standard for all senses in American English,[3] where, however, the informal "penny" is typically only used of the coins in any case, values being expressed in "cents".[5] The informal name for the American cent seems to have spread from New York State.[6]

In Britain, prior to decimalization, values from two to eleven pence were often written, and spoken as a single word, as twopence or tuppence, threepence or thruppence, etc. (Other values were usually expressed in terms of shillings and pence or written as two words, which might or might not be hyphenated.) Where a single coin represented a number of pence, it was treated as a single noun, as a sixpence. Thus, "a threepence" (but more usually "a threepenny bit") would be a single coin of that value whereas "three pence" would be its value, and "three pennies" would be three penny coins. In British English, divisions of a penny were added to such combinations without a conjunction, as sixpence-farthing, and such constructions were also treated as single nouns. Adjectival use of such coins used the ending -penny, as sixpenny.[3]

The British abbreviation d. derived from the Latin denarius. It followed the amount, e.g. "11d". It has been replaced since decimalization by p, usually written without a space or period. From this abbreviation, it is common to speak of pennies and values in pence as "p".[3] In North America, it is common to abbreviate cents with the currency symbol ¢. Elsewhere, it is usually written with a simple c.

History Edit

Antiquity Edit

The medieval silver penny was modeled on similar coins in antiquity, such as the Greek drachma, the Carthaginian shekel, and the Roman denarius. Forms of these seem to have reached as far as Norway and Sweden.[citation needed] The use of Roman currency in Britain, seems to have fallen off after the Roman withdrawal and subsequent Saxon invasions.

Frankish Empire Edit

Charlemagne's father Pepin the Short instituted a major currency reform around AD 755,[7] aiming to reorganize Francia's previous silver standard with a standardized .940-fine denier (Latin: denarius) weighing 1240 pound.[8] (As the Carolingian pound seems to have been about 489.5 grams,[9][10] each penny weighed about 2 grams.) Around 790, Charlemagne introduced a new .950 or .960-fine penny with a smaller diameter. Surviving specimens have an average weight of 1.70 grams, although some estimate the original ideal[clarification needed] mass at 1.76 grams.[11][12][13] But despite the purity and quality of these pennies, they were often rejected by traders throughout the Carolingian period, in favor of the gold coins used elsewhere; this led to repeated legislation against such refusal, to accept the king's currency.[14]

England Edit

  
O: Draped bust of Aethelred left. +ÆĐELRED REX ANGLOR[UM] R: Long cross. +EADǷOLD MO CÆNT
Anglo-Saxon silver "Long Cross" penny of Aethelred II, moneyer Eadwold, Canterbury, c. 997–1003. The cross made cutting the coin into half-pennies or farthings (quarter-pennies) easier. (Note spelling Eadƿold in inscription, using Anglo-Saxon letter wynn in place of modern w.)

Some of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms initially copied the solidus, the late Roman gold coin; at the time, however, gold was so rare and valuable that even the smallest coins had such a great value that they could only be used in very large transactions and were sometimes not available at all. Around 641–670, there seems to have been a movement to use coins with lower gold content. This decreased their value and may have increased the number that could be minted, but these paler coins do not seem to have solved the problem of the value and scarcity of the currency. The miscellaneous silver sceattas minted in Frisia and Anglo-Saxon England after around 680 were probably known as "pennies" at the time. (The misnomer is based on a probable misreading of the Anglo-Saxon legal codes.)[15] Their purity varied and their weight fluctuated from about 0.8 to about 1.3 grams. They continued to be minted in East Anglia under Beonna and in Northumbria as late as the mid-9th century.

The first Carolingian-style pennies were introduced by King Offa of Mercia (r. 757–796), modeled on Pepin's system. His first series was 1240 of the Saxon pound of 5400 grains (350 grams), giving a pennyweight of about 1.46 grams. His queen Cynethryth also minted these coins under her own name.[16] Near the end of his reign, Offa minted his coins in imitation of Charlemagne's reformed pennies. Offa's coins were imitated by East Anglia, Kent, Wessex and Northumbria, as well as by two Archbishops of Canterbury.[16] As in the Frankish Empire,[8] all these pennies were notionally fractions of shillings (solidi; sol) and pounds (librae; livres) but during this period neither larger unit was minted. Instead, they functioned only as notional units of account.[17] (For instance, a "shilling" or "solidus" of grain was a measure equivalent to the amount of grain that 12 pennies could purchase.)[18] English currency was notionally .925-fine sterling silver at the time of Henry II, but the weight and value of the silver penny steadily declined from 1300 onwards.

In 1257, Henry III minted a gold penny which had the nominal value of 1 shilling 8 pence (i.e. 20 d.). At first, the coin proved unpopular because it was overvalued for its weight; by 1265 it was so undervalued—the bullion value of its gold being worth 2 shillings (i.e. 24 d.) by then—that the coins still in circulation were almost entirely melted down for the value of their gold. Only eight gold pennies are known to survive.[19] It was not until the reign of Edward III that the florin and noble established a common gold currency in England.

 
A worn medieval penny, probably dating from the reigns of Henry VI–VII, AD 1413–1461

The earliest halfpenny and farthingd.) found date from the reign of Henry III. The need for small change was also sometimes met by simply cutting a full penny into halves or quarters. In 1527, Henry VIII abolished the Tower pound of 5400 grains, replacing it with the Troy pound of 5760 grains (making a penny 5760/240 = 24 grains) and establishing a new pennyweight of 1.56 grams, although, confusingly, the penny coin by then weighed about 8 grains, and had never weighed as much as this 24 grains. The last silver pence for general circulation were minted during the reign of Charles II around 1660. Since then, they have only been coined for issue as Maundy money, royal alms given to the elderly on Maundy Thursday.

United Kingdom Edit

Throughout the 18th century, the British government did not mint pennies for general circulation and the bullion value of the existing silver pennies caused them to be withdrawn from circulation. Merchants and mining companies, such as Anglesey's Parys Mining Co., began to issue their own copper tokens to fill the need for small change.[20] Finally, amid the Napoleonic Wars, the government authorized Matthew Boulton to mint copper pennies and twopences at Soho Mint in Birmingham in 1797.[21] Typically, 1 lb. of copper produced 24 pennies. In 1860, the copper penny was replaced with a bronze one (95% copper, 4% tin, 1% zinc). Each pound of bronze was coined into 48 pennies.[22]

United States Edit

The United States' cent, popularly known as the "penny" since the early 19th century,[6] began with the unpopular copper chain cent in 1793.[23] Abraham Lincoln was the first historical figure to appear on a U.S. coin when he was portrayed on the one-cent coin to commemorate his 100th birthday.[24]

South Africa Edit

The penny that was brought to the Cape Colony (in what is now South Africa) was a large coin—36 mm in diameter, 3.3 mm thick, and 1 oz (28 g)—and the twopence was correspondingly larger at 41 mm in diameter, 5 mm thick and 2 oz (57 g). On them was Britannia with a trident in her hand. The English called this coin the Cartwheel penny due to its large size and raised rim,[25] but the Capetonians referred to it as the Devil's Penny as they assumed that only the Devil used a trident.[26] The coins were very unpopular due to their large weight and size.[27] On 6 June 1825, Lord Charles Somerset, the governor, issued a proclamation that only British Sterling would be legal tender in the Cape Colony (colonial South Africa). The new British coins (which were introduced in England in 1816), among them being the shilling, six-pence of silver, the penny, half-penny, and quarter-penny in copper, were introduced to the Cape. Later two-shilling, four-penny, and three-penny coins were added to the coinage. The size and denomination of the 1816 British coins, with the exception of the four-penny coins, were used in South Africa until 1960.[26]

Criticism of continued use Edit

Handling and counting penny coins entail transaction costs that may be higher than a penny. It has been claimed that, for micropayments, the mental arithmetic costs more than the penny. Changes in the market prices of metals, combined with currency inflation, have caused the metal value of penny coins to exceed their face value.[28][29]

Australia and New Zealand adopted 5¢ and 10¢, respectively, as their lowest coin denomination,[30] followed by Canada, which adopted 5¢ as its lowest denomination in 2012.[31] Several nations have stopped minting equivalent value coins, and efforts have been made to end the routine use of pennies in several countries.[32] In the UK, since 1992, one- and two-penny coins have been made from copper-plated steel (making them magnetic) instead of bronze.

In popular culture Edit

  • In British and American culture, finding a penny is traditionally considered lucky. A proverbial expression of this is "Find a penny, pick it up, and all the day you'll have good luck."[n 4]
  • "A penny for your thoughts" is an idiomatic way of asking someone what they are thinking about. It is first attested in John Heywood's 1547 Dialogue Conteinying the Nomber in Effect of All the Proverbes in the Englishe Tongue,[34] at a time when the penny was still a sterling silver coin.
  • "In for a penny, in for a pound," is a common expression used to express someone's intention to see an undertaking through, however much time, effort, or money this entails.
  • To "give (one's) tuppence/tuppenny/two'penneth (worth)", is a commonwealth saying that uses the words for two pence to share one's opinion, idea, or point of view, regardless of whether or not others want to hear it. A similar expression using the US term of cents is my two cents.
  • In British English, to "spend a penny" means to urinate. Its etymology is literal: coin-operated public toilets commonly charged a pre-decimal penny, beginning with the Great Exhibition of 1851.
  • "Tuppence" - Old British slang word for ‘vagina’.[35]
  • Around Decimal Day in 1971, British Rail introduced the "Superloo", improved public toilets that charged 2p (equivalent to nearly 5d).[36]
  • In 1936 U.S. shoemaker G.H. Bass & Co. introduced its "Weejuns" penny loafers. Other companies followed with similar products.
  • A common myth is that a penny dropped from the Empire State Building would kill a person or crack the sidewalk. However, a penny is too light and has too much air resistance to acquire enough speed to do much damage since it reaches terminal velocity after falling about 50 feet.[37][38]

List of pennies Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "He sal haf a penny til his noynsankys..."[2]
  2. ^ The Oxford English Dictionary notes two families of variants, one comprising pæning, pending, peninc, penincg, pening, peningc, and Northumbrian penning and the other peneg, pennig, pænig, penig, penug, pæni, and peni, the later of which gave rise to the modern form.[3]
  3. ^ Germanic cognates of penny include Dutch, Danish, Swedish, and Old Saxon penning and German: Pfennig in reference to the coin and Icelandic: peningur, Swedish pengar, and Danish: penge in reference to "money". Gothic, however, has 𐍃𐌺𐌰𐍄𐍄𐍃 (skatts) for the occurrence of "denarius" (Greek: δηνάριος, dēnários) in the New Testament.[3]
  4. ^ This may be the source or a development of the "See a pin and pick it up, all the day you'll have good luck" recorded in a mid-19th century edition of Mother Goose.[33]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ "Canada's Last Penny Minted". CBC News. from the original on 2012-09-04. Retrieved 2012-08-30..
  2. ^ Slater, J. (1952), Early Scots Texts, Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "penny, n.", Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed., 2005.
  4. ^ Vennemann, Theo (2013). "Ne'er-a-Face: A Note on the Etymology of Penny, with an Appendix on the Etymology of Pane". In Patrizia Noel Aziz Hanna (ed.). Germania Semitica. Trends in Linguistics: Studies and Monographs, No. 259. Walter de Gruyter. p. 467. ISBN 978-3-11-030109-0. from the original on 2017-02-25. Retrieved 2016-02-08..
  5. ^ The New Statesman, London: Statesman Publishing, 16 December 1966, p. 896.
  6. ^ a b Constellation, 12 March 1831, p. 133.
  7. ^ Allen (2009).
  8. ^ a b Chown (1994), p. 23.
  9. ^ Ferguson (1974), "Pound".
  10. ^ Munro (2012), p. 31.
  11. ^ Cipolla (1993), p. 129.
  12. ^ Frassetto (2003), p. 131.
  13. ^ NBB (2006).
  14. ^ Suchodolski (1983).
  15. ^ Bosworth & al.
  16. ^ a b Blackburn & al. (1986), p. 277.
  17. ^ Keary (2005), p. xxii.
  18. ^ Scott (1964), p. 40.
  19. ^ "The Gold Penny", Coin and Bullion Pages, from the original on 2016-02-10, retrieved 2016-02-17.
  20. ^ Selgin (2008), p. 16.
  21. ^ "The Cartwheel Penny and Twopence of 1797", British Coinage, Royal Mint Museum, retrieved 15 May 2014[permanent dead link].
  22. ^ EB (1911).
  23. ^ "Timeline", Historian's Corner, Washington: US Mint, from the original on 2011-02-25, retrieved 2011-01-30.
  24. ^ "Penny History - Americans for Common Cents".
  25. ^ Severn Internet Services – www.severninternet.co.uk. "Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery Information Centre". BMAGiC. from the original on 2012-02-21. Retrieved 2011-12-22.
  26. ^ a b "South African History of Coins". from the original on 2011-11-28. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  27. ^ "Currencyhelp.net". Currencyhelp.net. from the original on 2008-05-30. Retrieved 2011-12-22.
  28. ^ "Around the Nation; Treasurer Says Zinc Penny May Save $50 Million a Year", The New York Times, 1 April 1981, from the original on 11 April 2012, retrieved 2009-05-07
  29. ^ Hagenbaugh, Barbara (10 May 2006), Coins cost more to make than face value, USA Today, from the original on 7 March 2009, retrieved 2009-05-07
  30. ^ , Mytelus, archived from the original on 12 June 2008, retrieved 7 May 2009.
  31. ^ Smith, Joanna (30 March 2012), "Federal Budget 2012: Pennies to Be Withdrawn from Circulation", The Star, Toronto, from the original on 6 October 2016, retrieved 8 September 2017{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  32. ^ Lewis, Mark (5 July 2002). "Ban The Penny". Forbes. from the original on 22 May 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-07.
  33. ^ Mother Goose's Chimes, Rhymes, & Melodies, H.B. Ashmead, c. 1861, from the original on 9 January 2012, retrieved 14 November 2009.
  34. ^ Corrado, John (11 October 2001), "What's the Origin of "A Penny for Your Thoughts"?", The Straight Dope, from the original on 23 July 2011, retrieved 13 February 2013.
  35. ^ "Why Winkle and Tuppence are acceptable euphemisms for children". The Guardian. 2017-05-05. from the original on 2022-09-16.
  36. ^ , Nation on Film, BBC, archived from the original on April 18, 2006.
  37. ^ "Could a Penny Dropped off a Skyscraper Actually Kill You?". Scientific American.
  38. ^ "What would happen if you were hit by a penny falling from a skyscraper?". USA Today.
  39. ^ Gullbekk, Svein H. (2014), "Vestfold: A Monetary Perspective on the Viking Age", Early Medieval Monetary History: Studies in Memory of Mark Blackburn, Studies in Early Medieval Britain and Ireland, Farnham: Ashgate, p. 343, ISBN 9781409456681, from the original on 2016-05-30, retrieved 2016-02-08.

Bibliography Edit

  • Allen, Larry (2009), "Carolingian Reform", The Encyclopedia of Money, Sta. Barbara: ABC Clio, pp. 59–60, ISBN 978-1-59884-251-7.
  • Blackburn, M.A.S.; et al. (1986), Medieval European Coinage, Vol. 1: The Early Middle Ages (5th–10th centuries), Cambridge{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Bosworth; et al., An Old English Dictionary.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Penny" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 115–116.
  • Chown, John F (1994), A History of Money from AD 800, London: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-10279-0.
  • Cipolla, Carlo M. (1993), Before the Industrial Revolution: European Society and Economy, 1000–1700, ISBN 9780203695128.
  • Ferguson, Wallace K. (1974), "Money and Coinage of the Age of Erasmus: An Historical and Analytical Glossary with Particular Reference to France, the Low Countries, England, the Rhineland, and Italy", The Correspondence of Erasmus: Letters 1 to 141: 1484 to 1500, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 311–349, ISBN 0-8020-1981-1.
  • Frassetto, Michael (2003), Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe: Society in Transformation, ISBN 9781576072639.
  • Keary, Charles Francis (2005), A Catalogue of English Coins in the British Museum: Anglo-Saxon Series, Vol. I.
  • Munro, John H. (2012), "The Technology and Economics of Coinage Debasements in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: With Special Reference to the Low Countries and England", Money in the Pre-Industrial World: Bullion, Debasements, and Coin Substitutes, Pickering & Chatto, republished 2016 by Routledge, pp. 30 ff, ISBN 978-1-84893-230-2.
  • Scott, Martin (1964), Medieval Europe, New York: Dorset Press, ISBN 0-88029-115-X.
  • Islam and the Carolingian Penny, National Bank of Belgium Museum, November 2006.
  • Selgin, George A. (2008), Good Money: Birmingham Button Makers, the Royal Mint, and the Beginnings of Modern Coinage, 1775–1821, University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-11631-7.
  • Suchodolski, Stanislaw (1983), "On the Rejection of Good Coin in Carolingian Europe", Studies in Numismatic Method: Presented to Philip Grierson, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 147–152, ISBN 0-521-22503-5.

External links Edit

  • Copper Penny Importance – Blog post & video covering the importance of retaining copper pennies.
  • The MegaPenny Project – A visualisation of what exponential numbers of pennies would look like.
  • Silver Pennies – Pictures of English silver pennies from Anglo-Saxon times to the present.
  • Copper Pennies – Pictures of English copper pennies from 1797 to 1860.
  • US Lincoln Penny on the Planet MarsCuriosity Rover (September 10, 2012).
  • "Penny" . Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.
  • "Penny" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

penny, this, article, about, coin, other, uses, penny, pennies, disambiguation, pence, redirects, here, other, uses, pence, disambiguation, penny, coin, pennies, unit, currency, pence, various, countries, borrowed, from, carolingian, denarius, hence, former, a. This article is about the coin For other uses of penny or pennies see Penny disambiguation Pence redirects here For other uses see Pence disambiguation A penny is a coin PL pennies or a unit of currency PL pence in various countries Borrowed from the Carolingian denarius hence its former abbreviation d it is usually the smallest denomination within a currency system Presently it is the formal name of the British penny abbr p and the de facto name of the American one cent coin abbr as well as the informal Irish designation of the 1 cent euro coin abbr c Due to inflation pennies have lost virtually all their purchasing power and are often viewed as an expensive burden to merchants banks government mints and the public in general A 1911 Australian penny top Coin of Eric Bloodaxe bottom with legend reading Eric Rex King Eric Penny is also the informal name of the cent unit of account in Canada although one cent coins were removed from circulation in 2012 1 Similarly Australian one cent coins were withdrawn from circulation in 1992 and New Zealand one cent coins were demonetised in 1990 The name penny is also used in reference to various historical currencies also derived from the Carolingian system such as the French denier and the German pfennig It may also be informally used to refer to any similar smallest denomination coin such as the euro cent or Chinese fen The Carolingian penny was originally a 0 940 fine silver coin weighing 1 240 pound It was adopted by Offa of Mercia and other English kings and remained the principal currency in Europe over the next few centuries until repeated debasements necessitated the development of more valuable coins The British penny remained a silver coin until the expense of the Napoleonic Wars prompted the use of base metals in 1797 Despite the decimalization of currencies in the United States and later throughout the British Commonwealth the name remains in informal use No penny is currently formally subdivided although farthings 1 4 d halfpennies and half cents have previously been minted and the mill 1 10 remains in use as a unit of account in some contexts Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Frankish Empire 2 3 England 2 4 United Kingdom 2 5 United States 2 6 South Africa 3 Criticism of continued use 4 In popular culture 5 List of pennies 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksEtymology Edit nbsp nbsp nbsp From top to bottom a penny depicting King Offa of Mercia a 1929 South African penny a 2013 one cent coin from the United States colloquially called a penny Worth 1 100 of 1 USD US Dollar As a decimal it is written as 0 01 Penny is first attested in a 1394 Scots text n 1 a variant of Old English peni a development of numerous variations including pennig penning and pending n 2 The etymology of the term penny is uncertain although cognates are common across almost all Germanic languages n 3 and suggest a base pan pann or pand with the individualizing suffix ing Common suggestions include that it was originally panding as a Low Franconian form of Old High German pfant pawn in the sense of a pledge or debt as in a pawnbroker putting up collateral as a pledge for repayment of loans panning as a form of the West Germanic word for frying pan presumably owing to its shape and ponding as a very early borrowing of Latin pondus pound 3 Recently it has been proposed that it may represent an early borrowing of Punic pn Pane or Pene Face as the face of Carthaginian goddess Tanit was represented on nearly all Carthaginian currency 4 Following decimalization the British and Irish coins were marked new penny until 1982 and 1985 respectively From the 16th century the regular plural pennies fell out of use in England when referring to a sum of money e g That costs tenpence but continued to be used to refer to more than one penny coin Here you are a sixpence and four pennies It remains common in Scottish English and is standard for all senses in American English 3 where however the informal penny is typically only used of the coins in any case values being expressed in cents 5 The informal name for the American cent seems to have spread from New York State 6 In Britain prior to decimalization values from two to eleven pence were often written and spoken as a single word as twopence or tuppence threepence or thruppence etc Other values were usually expressed in terms of shillings and pence or written as two words which might or might not be hyphenated Where a single coin represented a number of pence it was treated as a single noun as a sixpence Thus a threepence but more usually a threepenny bit would be a single coin of that value whereas three pence would be its value and three pennies would be three penny coins In British English divisions of a penny were added to such combinations without a conjunction as sixpence farthing and such constructions were also treated as single nouns Adjectival use of such coins used the ending penny as sixpenny 3 The British abbreviation d derived from the Latin denarius It followed the amount e g 11d It has been replaced since decimalization by p usually written without a space or period From this abbreviation it is common to speak of pennies and values in pence as p 3 In North America it is common to abbreviate cents with the currency symbol Elsewhere it is usually written with a simple c History EditAntiquity Edit Main articles Drachma Shekel and Denarius The medieval silver penny was modeled on similar coins in antiquity such as the Greek drachma the Carthaginian shekel and the Roman denarius Forms of these seem to have reached as far as Norway and Sweden citation needed The use of Roman currency in Britain seems to have fallen off after the Roman withdrawal and subsequent Saxon invasions Frankish Empire Edit Main article French denier Charlemagne s father Pepin the Short instituted a major currency reform around AD 755 7 aiming to reorganize Francia s previous silver standard with a standardized 940 fine denier Latin denarius weighing 1 240 pound 8 As the Carolingian pound seems to have been about 489 5 grams 9 10 each penny weighed about 2 grams Around 790 Charlemagne introduced a new 950 or 960 fine penny with a smaller diameter Surviving specimens have an average weight of 1 70 grams although some estimate the original ideal clarification needed mass at 1 76 grams 11 12 13 But despite the purity and quality of these pennies they were often rejected by traders throughout the Carolingian period in favor of the gold coins used elsewhere this led to repeated legislation against such refusal to accept the king s currency 14 England Edit Main articles English penny Gold penny History of the halfpenny Farthing English coin and Maundy money nbsp nbsp O Draped bust of Aethelred left AEĐELRED REX ANGLOR UM R Long cross EADǷOLD MO CAENTAnglo Saxon silver Long Cross penny of Aethelred II moneyer Eadwold Canterbury c 997 1003 The cross made cutting the coin into half pennies or farthings quarter pennies easier Note spelling Eadƿold in inscription using Anglo Saxon letter wynn in place of modern w Some of the Anglo Saxon kingdoms initially copied the solidus the late Roman gold coin at the time however gold was so rare and valuable that even the smallest coins had such a great value that they could only be used in very large transactions and were sometimes not available at all Around 641 670 there seems to have been a movement to use coins with lower gold content This decreased their value and may have increased the number that could be minted but these paler coins do not seem to have solved the problem of the value and scarcity of the currency The miscellaneous silver sceattas minted in Frisia and Anglo Saxon England after around 680 were probably known as pennies at the time The misnomer is based on a probable misreading of the Anglo Saxon legal codes 15 Their purity varied and their weight fluctuated from about 0 8 to about 1 3 grams They continued to be minted in East Anglia under Beonna and in Northumbria as late as the mid 9th century The first Carolingian style pennies were introduced by King Offa of Mercia r 757 796 modeled on Pepin s system His first series was 1 240 of the Saxon pound of 5400 grains 350 grams giving a pennyweight of about 1 46 grams His queen Cynethryth also minted these coins under her own name 16 Near the end of his reign Offa minted his coins in imitation of Charlemagne s reformed pennies Offa s coins were imitated by East Anglia Kent Wessex and Northumbria as well as by two Archbishops of Canterbury 16 As in the Frankish Empire 8 all these pennies were notionally fractions of shillings solidi sol and pounds librae livres but during this period neither larger unit was minted Instead they functioned only as notional units of account 17 For instance a shilling or solidus of grain was a measure equivalent to the amount of grain that 12 pennies could purchase 18 English currency was notionally 925 fine sterling silver at the time of Henry II but the weight and value of the silver penny steadily declined from 1300 onwards In 1257 Henry III minted a gold penny which had the nominal value of 1 shilling 8 pence i e 20 d At first the coin proved unpopular because it was overvalued for its weight by 1265 it was so undervalued the bullion value of its gold being worth 2 shillings i e 24 d by then that the coins still in circulation were almost entirely melted down for the value of their gold Only eight gold pennies are known to survive 19 It was not until the reign of Edward III that the florin and noble established a common gold currency in England nbsp A worn medieval penny probably dating from the reigns of Henry VI VII AD 1413 1461The earliest halfpenny and farthing d found date from the reign of Henry III The need for small change was also sometimes met by simply cutting a full penny into halves or quarters In 1527 Henry VIII abolished the Tower pound of 5400 grains replacing it with the Troy pound of 5760 grains making a penny 5760 240 24 grains and establishing a new pennyweight of 1 56 grams although confusingly the penny coin by then weighed about 8 grains and had never weighed as much as this 24 grains The last silver pence for general circulation were minted during the reign of Charles II around 1660 Since then they have only been coined for issue as Maundy money royal alms given to the elderly on Maundy Thursday United Kingdom Edit Main articles Predecimal British penny Predecimal British halfpenny British farthing Decimal Day British penny and British halfpenny Throughout the 18th century the British government did not mint pennies for general circulation and the bullion value of the existing silver pennies caused them to be withdrawn from circulation Merchants and mining companies such as Anglesey s Parys Mining Co began to issue their own copper tokens to fill the need for small change 20 Finally amid the Napoleonic Wars the government authorized Matthew Boulton to mint copper pennies and twopences at Soho Mint in Birmingham in 1797 21 Typically 1 lb of copper produced 24 pennies In 1860 the copper penny was replaced with a bronze one 95 copper 4 tin 1 zinc Each pound of bronze was coined into 48 pennies 22 United States Edit Main article Penny United States coin The United States cent popularly known as the penny since the early 19th century 6 began with the unpopular copper chain cent in 1793 23 Abraham Lincoln was the first historical figure to appear on a U S coin when he was portrayed on the one cent coin to commemorate his 100th birthday 24 South Africa Edit The penny that was brought to the Cape Colony in what is now South Africa was a large coin 36 mm in diameter 3 3 mm thick and 1 oz 28 g and the twopence was correspondingly larger at 41 mm in diameter 5 mm thick and 2 oz 57 g On them was Britannia with a trident in her hand The English called this coin the Cartwheel penny due to its large size and raised rim 25 but the Capetonians referred to it as the Devil s Penny as they assumed that only the Devil used a trident 26 The coins were very unpopular due to their large weight and size 27 On 6 June 1825 Lord Charles Somerset the governor issued a proclamation that only British Sterling would be legal tender in the Cape Colony colonial South Africa The new British coins which were introduced in England in 1816 among them being the shilling six pence of silver the penny half penny and quarter penny in copper were introduced to the Cape Later two shilling four penny and three penny coins were added to the coinage The size and denomination of the 1816 British coins with the exception of the four penny coins were used in South Africa until 1960 26 Criticism of continued use EditSee also Withdrawal of low denomination coins Handling and counting penny coins entail transaction costs that may be higher than a penny It has been claimed that for micropayments the mental arithmetic costs more than the penny Changes in the market prices of metals combined with currency inflation have caused the metal value of penny coins to exceed their face value 28 29 Australia and New Zealand adopted 5 and 10 respectively as their lowest coin denomination 30 followed by Canada which adopted 5 as its lowest denomination in 2012 31 Several nations have stopped minting equivalent value coins and efforts have been made to end the routine use of pennies in several countries 32 In the UK since 1992 one and two penny coins have been made from copper plated steel making them magnetic instead of bronze In popular culture EditIn British and American culture finding a penny is traditionally considered lucky A proverbial expression of this is Find a penny pick it up and all the day you ll have good luck n 4 A penny for your thoughts is an idiomatic way of asking someone what they are thinking about It is first attested in John Heywood s 1547 Dialogue Conteinying the Nomber in Effect of All the Proverbes in the Englishe Tongue 34 at a time when the penny was still a sterling silver coin In for a penny in for a pound is a common expression used to express someone s intention to see an undertaking through however much time effort or money this entails To give one s tuppence tuppenny two penneth worth is a commonwealth saying that uses the words for two pence to share one s opinion idea or point of view regardless of whether or not others want to hear it A similar expression using the US term of cents is my two cents In British English to spend a penny means to urinate Its etymology is literal coin operated public toilets commonly charged a pre decimal penny beginning with the Great Exhibition of 1851 Tuppence Old British slang word for vagina 35 Around Decimal Day in 1971 British Rail introduced the Superloo improved public toilets that charged 2p equivalent to nearly 5d 36 In 1936 U S shoemaker G H Bass amp Co introduced its Weejuns penny loafers Other companies followed with similar products A common myth is that a penny dropped from the Empire State Building would kill a person or crack the sidewalk However a penny is too light and has too much air resistance to acquire enough speed to do much damage since it reaches terminal velocity after falling about 50 feet 37 38 List of pennies EditAustralia penny 1911 1964 and cent 1966 1992 Bosnia and Herzegovina pfenig 1998 present Canada cent 1858 2012 Denmark penning c 830 39 a 1873 England penny c 785 1707 Estonia penn 1918 1927 Falkland Islands Falkland Islands penny 1974 present Finland penni 1861 2002 France denier c 755 1794 Various German states Pfennig c 755 2002 Gibraltar Gibraltar penny 1988 present Guernsey as an 8 double coin Guernsey penny 1830 1921 and 1 240 of a Guernsey pound 1921 71 and 1 100 of a Guernsey pound 1971 present Ireland penny as 1 240 Irish pound 1928 68 and as 1 100 Irish pound 1971 2002 and euro cent 2002 present Isle of Man Manx penny 1668 present Jersey Jersey penny 1841 present Netherlands penning 8th 16th centuries New Zealand penny 1940 1967 and cent 1967 1987 Kingdom of Poland fenig 1917 1918 and 1918 1924 during Second Polish Republic Norway penning c 1000 1873 Saint Helena and Ascension Island Saint Helena penny 1984 present Scotland Penny Scots peighinn c 1130 1707 Sweden penning c 1150 1548 South Africa penny 1923 c 1961 and cent 1961 2002 Transvaal penny 1892 1900 United Kingdom penny as 1 240 British pound 1707 1971 and as 1 100 British pound 1971 present United States cent 1793 present Medieval Wales ceiniog 10th 13th centuries See also Edit nbsp Money portalCoins of the pound sterling Elongated coin pressed penny Efforts to eliminate the penny in the United States History of the English penny c 600 1066 Legal Tender Modernization Act One cent coin disambiguation Penny sizes of nails Pennyweight Sen equivalent in Japan used between the 19th century and 1953 PrutahNotes Edit He sal haf a penny til his noynsankys 2 The Oxford English Dictionary notes two families of variants one comprising paening pending peninc penincg pening peningc and Northumbrian penning and the other peneg pennig paenig penig penug paeni and peni the later of which gave rise to the modern form 3 Germanic cognates of penny include Dutch Danish Swedish and Old Saxon penning and German Pfennig in reference to the coin and Icelandic peningur Swedish pengar and Danish penge in reference to money Gothic however has 𐍃𐌺𐌰𐍄𐍄𐍃 skatts for the occurrence of denarius Greek dhnarios denarios in the New Testament 3 This may be the source or a development of the See a pin and pick it up all the day you ll have good luck recorded in a mid 19th century edition of Mother Goose 33 References EditCitations Edit Canada s Last Penny Minted CBC News Archived from the original on 2012 09 04 Retrieved 2012 08 30 Slater J 1952 Early Scots Texts Edinburgh University of Edinburgh Press a b c d e f penny n Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed 2005 Vennemann Theo 2013 Ne er a Face A Note on the Etymology of Penny with an Appendix on the Etymology of Pane In Patrizia Noel Aziz Hanna ed Germania Semitica Trends in Linguistics Studies and Monographs No 259 Walter de Gruyter p 467 ISBN 978 3 11 030109 0 Archived from the original on 2017 02 25 Retrieved 2016 02 08 The New Statesman London Statesman Publishing 16 December 1966 p 896 a b Constellation 12 March 1831 p 133 Allen 2009 a b Chown 1994 p 23 Ferguson 1974 Pound Munro 2012 p 31 Cipolla 1993 p 129 Frassetto 2003 p 131 NBB 2006 Suchodolski 1983 Bosworth amp al a b Blackburn amp al 1986 p 277 Keary 2005 p xxii Scott 1964 p 40 The Gold Penny Coin and Bullion Pages archived from the original on 2016 02 10 retrieved 2016 02 17 Selgin 2008 p 16 The Cartwheel Penny and Twopence of 1797 British Coinage Royal Mint Museum retrieved 15 May 2014 permanent dead link EB 1911 Timeline Historian s Corner Washington US Mint archived from the original on 2011 02 25 retrieved 2011 01 30 Penny History Americans for Common Cents Severn Internet Services www severninternet co uk Birmingham Museums amp Art Gallery Information Centre BMAGiC Archived from the original on 2012 02 21 Retrieved 2011 12 22 a b South African History of Coins Archived from the original on 2011 11 28 Retrieved 2009 06 03 Currencyhelp net Currencyhelp net Archived from the original on 2008 05 30 Retrieved 2011 12 22 Around the Nation Treasurer Says Zinc Penny May Save 50 Million a Year The New York Times 1 April 1981 archived from the original on 11 April 2012 retrieved 2009 05 07 Hagenbaugh Barbara 10 May 2006 Coins cost more to make than face value USA Today archived from the original on 7 March 2009 retrieved 2009 05 07 Article 2897480 Mytelus archived from the original on 12 June 2008 retrieved 7 May 2009 Smith Joanna 30 March 2012 Federal Budget 2012 Pennies to Be Withdrawn from Circulation The Star Toronto archived from the original on 6 October 2016 retrieved 8 September 2017 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lewis Mark 5 July 2002 Ban The Penny Forbes Archived from the original on 22 May 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 07 Mother Goose s Chimes Rhymes amp Melodies H B Ashmead c 1861 archived from the original on 9 January 2012 retrieved 14 November 2009 Corrado John 11 October 2001 What s the Origin of A Penny for Your Thoughts The Straight Dope archived from the original on 23 July 2011 retrieved 13 February 2013 Why Winkle and Tuppence are acceptable euphemisms for children The Guardian 2017 05 05 Archived from the original on 2022 09 16 Spend a 6d in the superloo Nation on Film BBC archived from the original on April 18 2006 Could a Penny Dropped off a Skyscraper Actually Kill You Scientific American What would happen if you were hit by a penny falling from a skyscraper USA Today Gullbekk Svein H 2014 Vestfold A Monetary Perspective on the Viking Age Early Medieval Monetary History Studies in Memory of Mark Blackburn Studies in Early Medieval Britain and Ireland Farnham Ashgate p 343 ISBN 9781409456681 archived from the original on 2016 05 30 retrieved 2016 02 08 Bibliography Edit Allen Larry 2009 Carolingian Reform The Encyclopedia of Money Sta Barbara ABC Clio pp 59 60 ISBN 978 1 59884 251 7 Blackburn M A S et al 1986 Medieval European Coinage Vol 1 The Early Middle Ages 5th 10th centuries Cambridge a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bosworth et al An Old English Dictionary Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Penny Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 115 116 Chown John F 1994 A History of Money from AD 800 London Routledge ISBN 0 415 10279 0 Cipolla Carlo M 1993 Before the Industrial Revolution European Society and Economy 1000 1700 ISBN 9780203695128 Ferguson Wallace K 1974 Money and Coinage of the Age of Erasmus An Historical and Analytical Glossary with Particular Reference to France the Low Countries England the Rhineland and Italy The Correspondence of Erasmus Letters 1 to 141 1484 to 1500 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 311 349 ISBN 0 8020 1981 1 Frassetto Michael 2003 Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe Society in Transformation ISBN 9781576072639 Keary Charles Francis 2005 A Catalogue of English Coins in the British Museum Anglo Saxon Series Vol I Munro John H 2012 The Technology and Economics of Coinage Debasements in Medieval and Early Modern Europe With Special Reference to the Low Countries and England Money in the Pre Industrial World Bullion Debasements and Coin Substitutes Pickering amp Chatto republished 2016 by Routledge pp 30 ff ISBN 978 1 84893 230 2 Scott Martin 1964 Medieval Europe New York Dorset Press ISBN 0 88029 115 X Islam and the Carolingian Penny National Bank of Belgium Museum November 2006 Selgin George A 2008 Good Money Birmingham Button Makers the Royal Mint and the Beginnings of Modern Coinage 1775 1821 University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 11631 7 Suchodolski Stanislaw 1983 On the Rejection of Good Coin in Carolingian Europe Studies in Numismatic Method Presented to Philip Grierson Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 147 152 ISBN 0 521 22503 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Penny nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Penny Copper Penny Importance Blog post amp video covering the importance of retaining copper pennies The MegaPenny Project A visualisation of what exponential numbers of pennies would look like Silver Pennies Pictures of English silver pennies from Anglo Saxon times to the present Copper Pennies Pictures of English copper pennies from 1797 to 1860 US Lincoln Penny on the Planet Mars Curiosity Rover September 10 2012 Penny Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Penny New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Penny amp oldid 1177392818, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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