Pound (currency)

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The pound, a unit of currency, originated in Great Britain as the value of a pound mass of silver. For a long time a pound's worth of silver coins were a troy pound in mass.

Today, the term may refer to a number of current (primarily British and related) currencies, and a variety of now-obsolete currencies.

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The issue rights of the banks in Scotland and Northern Ireland are qualified by a requirement for them to make deposits with the Bank of England on a one to one basis for the notes issued.
The pound sterling is also the currency of the British Overseas Territories of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, British Antarctic Territory and British Indian Ocean Territory.[1][2][3]

Other currencies called pound:

  1. ^ Foreign and Commonwealth Office country profiles: South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
  2. ^ Foreign and Commonwealth Office country profiles: British Antarctic Territory
  3. ^ Foreign and Commonwealth Office country profiles: British Indian Ocean Territory
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