Jersey pound
The
pound sterling[
1] is the currency of
Jersey by virtue of an Order in Council of 1834. This means that Jersey is in currency union with the United Kingdom, and the Jersey Pound is equivalent to the
UK Pound Sterling. Both Jersey notes and
Bank of England notes are
legal tender in Jersey and circulate together, alongside the
Guernsey pound and Scottish banknotes.
The
livre tournois had been used as the legal
currency in Jersey for centuries. However, it was abolished during the
French Revolutionary period. Although the coins were no longer minted, it remained the legal currency in Jersey until
1837 when dwindling supplies of livres tournois and consequent difficulties in trade and payment obliged the adoption of the pound sterling as legal tender. The livre tournois circulated officially alongside British currency in Jersey until 1834 and unofficially thereafter. The rate of exchange between the two currencies was 1 livre 4 sous = 1
shilling (i.e., 1 sou = ½ penny) during the 18th century but changed to 1 livre 6 sous = 1 shilling in the early 19th century. Because French sous remained the chief small-change coins, when a new copper coinage was issued for Jersey in 1841, it was based on a penny worth 1/13 of a shilling, the equivalent of 2 sous. Coins were issued in denominations (as written on the coins) of 1/13, 1/26 and 1/52 shilling.
In 1877, a penny of 1/12 of a shilling was introduced. However, denominations continued to be written as fractions of a shilling, with threepence coins issued in 1957 carrying the denomination "one fourth of a shilling".
During the
German occupation in the
Second World War, a series of banknotes was issued by the States of Jersey. The States have issued a regular series of banknotes since 1963.
Along with the rest of the British Isles, Jersey decimalized in 1971 and began issuing a full series of circulating coins from ½p to 50p. £1 and £2 denominations followed later.
Jersey coinage portrays the Queen's profile on the obverse, with the following designs on the reverse:
*1p
Le Hocq Tower (coastal defence)
*2p L'Hermitage (site where Saint
Helier lived)
*5p Seymour Tower (offshore defence)
*10p La Pouquelaye de Faldouet (
dolmen)
*20p La Corbière lighthouse
*50p Grosnez Castle (
ruins)
Pound coins are issued, but are much less widely used than pound notes. Designs on the reverse of Jersey pound coins include series of crests of the 12 parishes, and historic Jersey-built ships. The
motto round the milled edge of Jersey pound coins is:
Insula Caesarea ("Island of Jersey" in
Latin). Two pound coins are issued also, but in small quantities and are rarely encountered.
 |
The obverse of a Jersey £20 note. |
 |
The reverse of a Jersey £20 note. |
The current notes depict Queen Elizabeth II on the front and various landmarks of Jersey or incidents in Jersey history on the reverse. The watermark is a
Jersey cow* 1 pound note, green,
St. Helier Parish Church (In
2004, a special edition £1 note is in general circulation alongside the St. Helier Parish Church note; this commemorative note marks the 800th
anniversary of the division of the
Duchy of Normandy in
1204 and the design consequently includes
Mont Orgueil castle and other historic
symbols)
* 5 pound note, purple,
La Corbière lighthouse* 10 pound note,
red,
The Death of Major Pierson,
Battle of Jersey,
1781* 20 pound note, blue,
St. Ouen's manor
* 50 pound note,
brown, Government House
As at December 2005, there was £64.7m of Jersey currency in circulation. A profit of £2.8m earned on the issue of Jersey currency was received by the Treasurer of the States in 2005.
*
Economy of Jersey*
British banknotes*
Livre tournois# Jersey Evening Post
30 December 2005