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'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife'

The autumn of 1797, and in the quiet town of Meryton, the world the inhabitants know is changing. The leisurely pace of life they have enjoyed upto this point is at an end. With the arrival of a new noble family and the militia, new relationships will be formed and others brought to a head. In a society of gossip and scandal, secrets long kept will be revealed and truths unveiled...
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 The Root of All Evil, ...aka Money and Maths
Lt. Keynes
Posted: Feb 19 2009, 12:16 AM


Lt R.N.
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Group: Civilian
Posts: 22
Member No.: 2
Joined: 3-February 09



Money was ridiculously complicated in Regency times.

Briefly…

2 farthings in a halfpenny.
2 halfpence in a penny (copper).
2 pence in a half-groat.
3 pence in a thruppence.
4 pence in a groat.
6 pence in a sixpence (tanner).
12 pence in a shilling (bob).
2 shillings in a florin.
2.5 shillings (2 shillings and sixpence) in a half-crown.
5 shillings in a crown.
20 shillings in a pound (quid).
…and 21 shillings in a guinea.

Pounds were denoted by the £ -sign. Shillings were denoted by “s”. Pence were denoted by “d”. Guineas were denoted by “g”.

An amount of money was notated in £, s, and d. For example, £3 6s. 9d. would be read as three pounds, six shillings and nine pence.

(And Britain thought that switching to decimalized currency would be too complicated and inconvenient!)

An income of approximately £20 per annum would equate to today’s minimum wage; about $15,000 per annum in American money, and (at current conversion rates) £10,700 per annum in the United Kingdom. A maidservant, for example, earned £16 per annum, and a private soldier around £23. Industrial workers were far worse off with barely half that; they were lucky if they got £10 a year.

In order to be counted as middle-class you needed at least £100 a year, with an additional £100 for a spouse, and £50 for each child. Otherwise, you would not even be able to have a single servant! You were expected to have either a fortune in the bank and live off the interest, or make money from the proceeds from whatever farming or industry took place on the lands that you owned as a member of the “landed gentry”. You could not actually work for a living as a middle-class woman at all, and as a man you could only respectably work in one of a very select few occupations: law, medicine, the clergy, a commissioned officer in the army or the navy.

Being a merchant or tradesman was out of the question; they were held in contempt by Society.

As far as those respectable occupations outlined above, in the law(as a barrister/solicitor) a gentleman could make £400 per annum. As a physician, approximately £200 per annum. A clergyman (a vicar, say) with a decent living might make between £200 and £700 a year.

A commissioned officer made a varying amount, depending on his rank. By way of example, however, a half-pay lieutenant in the Navy made about £100 a year (active service was about £50 more or thereabouts). An Army or militia lieutenant in the infantry made about £85 a year.

For comparison, a successful tradesman – a tailor, a grocer, or other merchant or artisan - might make £100 per annum. (Yes, a low-ranked officer made less than the average tradesman, but at least he was a gentleman.)

For daily use, here are some sample expenses:

A penny could buy you a loaf of bread, and threepence a meal at an inn with meat, broth, and beer.

Cotton enough to make a dress was six shillings. Silk was 26 shillings for enough to make a dress (and note that this is only the fabric, not including the trim or the tailoring). A lady’s fan cost 5 shillings, and a handkerchief could cost six shillings.

The plainest pair of shoes cost at least six shillings! Good solid boots might be a pound or two.

So how rich is Mr Darcy, with his £10,000 a year?

Considering that the average tradesman made £100 per annum, which might be equated to modern-day $75,000 or so (£53,500), Darcy is making 100 times as much! This means a modern income of $7,500,000 – yes, seven and a half MILLION. (Or £5,350,000.)
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