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HistoricHistorically, the use of decimal sub-units was the exception rather than the rule. Decimalised currencies show an advantage in accounting however they are less advantageous in every day life. The principal advantage of most non-decimal currencies is that they are more easily divided up, particularly into 3 and 4, than decimal currencies. A currency with 10 minor units to the major unit is neither divisible into 3 or 4. A currency with 100 minor units to the major unit is still not divisible by 3 and furthermore 100 may be an uncomfortably large number for some poorly educated people to deal with. For example: A third of a German Gulden (of 60 Kreuzer) is 20 Kreuzer while a third of a dollar is 33.333... cents. This flexibility is useful when trading and when sharing out sums of money. For this reason, many states chose to adopt non-decimal currencies based on divisions into sub-units such as 12 or 20, often with more than one tier of sub-units. There is a second, less deliberate, way in which non-decimal currencies emerged. Often multiple currencies would operate concurrently within an economy with non-decimal exchanges rate between them. For example: Fundamental units like the Reichsthaler/ rixdollar/ riksdaler/ rijksdaalder/ rigsdaler were widely accepted as a medium of accounting - matching different and changing local coins in Stockholm, Copenhagen, Antwerp, or Cologne. Inflation developed locally with changing subdivisions. One thus divided the Riksdaler into 2 silver dalers in Sweden in 1700, the 1715-19 devaluation of the coin changed that ratio, the new calculation was from then onwards to 1776 a division of 1 Riksdaler matching 3 daler silvermint. Most currencies made no distinction between units of accounting and units represented by coins and thus created such shifts. It is hence problematic to give the following list - it is a list of examples picked from different periods. Many of the subdivisions given below were subjected to historical changes.
A partial listing of former non-decimal currencies (giving only units of account):
See The Marteau Early 18th-Century Currency Converter for non-decimal conversion tools (using the conversion rates of the period around 1700) Computations in non-decimal currencies are notoriously tedious. Use The English Apples into Dutch Peers-Converter to calculate with non-decimal currencies of your choice and definition. Fictional non-decimal currencies
See also
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