No. The Bank of England first issued a Five Hundred Pound note somewhere between 1725 and 1745. The Five Hundred Pound note was last issued in 1943 and ceased to legal tender in 1945.
The current highest denomination banknote issued by the Bank of England is the Fifty Pound note. They have no current plans to produce any higher denomination notes in the foreseeable future.
Five Hundred Pounds was created in 1993.
5 monkeys
In the United Kingdom - 1 and 2 Pence coins are legal tender for amounts up to 20 Pence. 5 and 10 Pence coins are legal tender for amounts up to Five Pounds. 20 and 50 Pence coins are legal tender for amounts up to Ten Pounds. One, Two and Five Pound coins are legal tender for any amount. Australia and New Zealand have similar limitations to the UK on low denomination coins. In the USA - All circulating US coins and banknotes are legal tender for all debts and charges. (A retailer might reasonably refuse payment of large amounts in one cent coins due to the practicality of dealing with a wheelbarrow load of coins.)
16 thousand six hundred and twenty five pounds is written as 16625 pounds
Five Hundred Pounds GBP in 1816 had the purchasing power of about £26,400 GBP today.
505,000 grams = about 1,110 pounds.
10,500 pounds.
1500 pounds
580,000,000 pounds
A monkey is five hundred pounds, a ton is one hundred pounds, a pony is twenty five pounds, a score is twenty pounds and a cockle is ten pounds.
500,000 pounds (five-hundred thousand).
The Bank of England white Five Pound note was first issued in 1793, last issued in 1957 and ceased to be legal tender in 1961.