Jane Austen features on new £10 note

Jane Austen features on new £10 note

People in period costumes are also shown on the new £10 note featuring Jane Austen, which marks the 200th anniversary of Austen's death. (AP photo)
People in period costumes are also shown on the new £10 note featuring Jane Austen, which marks the 200th anniversary of Austen's death. (AP photo)

LONDON -- Two hundred years to the day after Jane Austen died, a new £10 banknote featuring an image of one of England's most revered authors has been unveiled - at the place where she was buried.

At the unveiling Tuesday of the new "tenner'' at Winchester Cathedral in southern England, Bank of England governor Mark Carney said the new note celebrated the "universal appeal'' of Austen's work.

Austen, whose novels include "Pride and Prejudice,'' "Emma'' and "Sense and Sensibility'', is considered one of the most perceptive chroniclers of English country life and mores in the Georgian era. Combining wit, romance and social commentary, her books have been adapted countless times for television and film.

"Our banknotes serve as repositories of the country's collective memory, promoting awareness of the United Kingdom's glorious history and highlighting the contributions of its greatest citizens,'' Carney said.

The new note, which is due to go into circulation on Sept 14, is the bank's latest effort to make its notes more secure by using plastic, not paper. (continues below)

The governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney poses with the new £10 note featuring the image of Jane Austen, during the unveiling ceremony, at Winchester Cathedral, in Winchester, England, on July 18, 2017. (AP photo)

It is printed on polymer, just like the recently re-launched £5 note, which features Winston Churchill. A new £20 note that will feature the landscape painter J M W Turner is also in the works and scheduled to be rolled out in 2020.

The new note also includes a new tactile feature to assist the visually impaired, which was developed in conjunction with the Royal National Institute of Blind People.

Apart from Queen Elizabeth II, whose portrait is on all UK currency, Austen is only the third woman to feature on a modern-day British banknote, after medical innovator Florence Nightingale and social reformer Elizabeth Fry. She was chosen after a campaign for more female representation.

As well as a portrait of Austen commissioned by her nephew in 1870, the note features a quote from "Pride and Prejudice'': "I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading!''

Some Austen fans questioned the choice of the quote, spoken in the novel with deep insincerity by the unlikable Caroline Bingley.

Carney said that the quote was quintessential Austen: It could be read straight or enjoyed ironically.

"It works on many levels,'' he said.

A tenner, as it is commonly known in Britain, does not go that far anymore. It's worth about US$13 and it could yield an Austen novel or maybe two, a couple of pints of beer (at best), and at a stretch a trip to the cinema to see one of those Austen adaptations.

Analysis by the insurance firm Aviva shows how inflation has bitten into the value of the pound to the tune of 99% since Austen's death. Aviva says something that cost £10 in 1817 would cost £786 today.

"Today's new 10-pound note allows us to powerfully demonstrate the impact of inflation over time,'' said Alistair McQueen, Aviva's head of saving and retirement.

Those holding the current  £10 note, which features Charles Darwin, have only until the spring of 2018 before they are withdrawn. An exact date will be announced three months in advance, the Bank said.

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