Andrea Cefalo is a Medieval fiction author and Medieval history blogger. Her debut novel, The Fairytale Keeper, was a quarter-finalist in Amazon’s 2013 Breakthrough Novel Contest. The next three books in The Fairytale Keeper series –The Countess’s Captive, The Baseborn Lady, and The Traitor’s Target—will debut early next year. She regularly posts about Medieval history on Facebook and Twitter.
The Coins of Medieval England
I began researching Medieval coinage of the Holy Roman Empire–especially in the area that would become Germany–for my Medieval fiction series. It was a far more complex topic than I anticipated. The coinage went from simple and organized in the ninth century–with Charlemagne’s declaration that a penny would be 1/240th of a pound of silver—to complex by the thirteenth century. (I’ve written an article entitled Inventing the Penny: Charlemagne’s Lost Effort at a Standard Currency that delves into this.)
For my purposes, I wanted to know what German coins were worth and what a person living in thirteenth century Cologne could buy with them. I thought developing a better understanding of the English coins might help me since I would be using Hodge’s List of prices—a list of Medieval items and their prices along with dates of purchase—to determine this. Below is table containing England’s Medieval coins, the year they were established, and their value.
Image |
Coin Name |
Established |
Value |
English Medieval Farthing
1377-1399
Richard II |
Farthing
(1/4d) |
1216 |
1/4 of a silver penny |
English Medieval Halfpenny
1399-1412
Henry IV |
Halfpenny
(1/2d) |
1100s |
1/2 of a silver penny |
English Medieval Penny
1199 – 1216
King John |
Silver Penny
(d) |
800s |
1/20 of a schilling or…
1/240th of a pound of silver |
English Medieval Groat
1327-1377
Edward III |
Silver Groat
(4d) |
1200s |
4 silver pennies or…
1/3 of a schilling |
During the Middle Ages, the schilling was a unit of account. People didn’t carry schillings in their purses. |
Schilling
(s) |
N/A |
12 silver pennies |
English Medieval Quarter Noble
1327-1377
Edward III |
Quarter Noble
(1s 8d) |
Mid 1300s |
20 pennies or…
1 schilling and 8 pennies |
English Medieval Half Noble
1399-1412
Henry IV |
Half Noble
(3s 4d) |
1351 |
40 pennies or…
3 schillings and 4 pennies or…
1/6 of a pound |
English Medieval Noble
1354-1355
Edward III |
Noble (6s 8d) |
Mid 1300s |
80 pennies or…
6 schillings and 8 pennies or…
1/3 of a pound |
During the Middle Ages, the mark was a unit of account. The English didn’t carry marks in their purses. |
Mark |
N/A |
160 pennies or…
1/2 of a pound |
During the Middle Ages, the pound was a unit of account. People didn’t carry pounds in their purses. |
Pound (£) |
N/A |
240 pennies
60 groats
20 schillings
6 Half Nobles
3 Nobles
2 Marks |
Sources:
Banks and Money.” Currency and Banking in the Late Middle Ages. N.p., n.d. Web. 23 Oct. 2014.
Brooke, Christopher Nugent Lawrence. Europe in the Central Middle Ages: 962-1154. Harlow: Longman, 2000. Print.
Cavendish, Richard. “The Farthing’s Last Day.” History Today. History Today Volume: 60 Issue: 12, 2010. Web. 27 Oct. 2014.
“Medieval Coin Denominations of Europe.” Medieval Coin Denominations of Europe. N.p., n.d. Web. 23 Oct. 2014.
Mortimer, Ian. The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2010. Print.
Images:
http://finds.org.uk/medievalcoins/types/type/id/2136
http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk/halfp.html
http://www.timelineauctions.com/lot/richard-ii-london-farthing/1977/
http://www.calgarycoin.com/medieval3.htm
https://www.yorkcoins.com/h1350_-_edward_iii_(1327-1377),_gold_quarter_noble.htm
https://www.yorkcoins.com/h1350_-_edward_iii_(1327-1377),_gold_quarter_noble.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_(English_coin)
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