English Penny
The English silver penny circulated for at least 1,100 years,
first appearing in the eighth century, and remaining in circulation until 1820,
setting a record of longevity for a circulating coin that has probably never
been matched.
At the opening of the eighth century, small silver coins circulated, known to
modern scholars as sceattas, and mentioned in the laws of Ine, a local
English ruler, as pennies.
The clearest point of departure for a history of the penny begins about a.d. 760 with King Offa, ruler of Mercia, an Anglo-Saxon
kingdom in central England. King Offa enjoys the added distinction of being the
only English king ever to strike coins bearing the name and bust of his consort.
He minted over a million pennies—by some estimates several millions—and he
surpassed all of his predecessors in the quality of his coinage, as well as its
quantity. Beginning with King Offa’s coinage, the penny remained the only
English coin in circulation for 500 years. Initially 240 silver pennies weighed
one pound, beginning the history of the English sterling pound.
The weight of the penny probably varied. In 1266 the English government
defined a silver penny to be the weight of “thirty-two wheat corns in the midst
of the ear.” In 1280 the English government fixed the weight of the penny equal
to 24 grains, setting the precedent that makes a pennyweight today equal to 24
troy grains. The 32 grains of wheat were comparable to 24 grains. During the
thirteenth century a penny was worth a day’s wages or could buy a sheep. The
value of the penny was sufficiently high that the government turned to minting
halfpenny coins in the fourteenth century, and three-halfpenny coins in the
sixteenth century. The weight of the penny steadily fell until silver pennies
struck in 1816 weighed 7.27 troy grains.
In 1257 Henry III minted gold pennies that were worth 20 silver pennies. Per
unit of weight gold was 10 times as valuable as silver, and Henry III’s gold
pennies weighed twice as much as the silver pennies. The issue of gold coins
failed, being too valuable to meet the needs of the English economy.
The word penny may have originated from the word pending, which
was the name of a coin issued by Penda, a king who ruled Mercia in the second
quarter of the seventh century. Nevertheless, linguistic forms of penny
are widely spread with equivalents in Dutch and Friesian. The Danish word for
money is still Penge, resembling penig, the Old English word for
“penny.” Variants of the word penny may have evolved from an old Danish
word for the pans that were used to coin money.
The smallest denomination of coins minted in the United States are called
pennies. They are token coins but were formerly minted from copper. The
purchasing power of the United States penny is a bit modest to justify the
phrase, “a pretty penny,” referring to a large sum of money. Sixpenny nails now
denote nails of a certain length, but originally denoted nails that sold for six
pennies per 100.
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