No. The Royal Bank of Scotland is the only bank in Scotland which still issues the £1 note, and this has been the case for many years. The Bank of Scotland and Royal Bank of Scotland are two separate banks.
No, pound notes are no longer legal tender in Scotland. They have been gradually replaced by pound coins and polymer banknotes. If you have any old pound notes, you can exchange them at a bank or post office.
The Clydesdale Bank, along with the Royal Bank of Scotland and the Bank of Scotland, still print banknotes for Scotland. As of late 2009, the Clydesdale Bank current issue of banknotes includes the Five, Ten, Twenty, Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes.
£1 notes are still in circulation in Scotland although it is rare to come across one. They are printed by the Royal Bank of Scotland, which is the only Scottish bank still to print £1 notes, albeit in very small quantities.
Scottish banknotes are not legal tender anywhere in the UK including Scotland, where the have the status of a Prommissory note. The Royal Bank of Scotland is the only bank still producing a One Pound note in Scotland. The notes are acceptable in Scotland. There is an agreement in place between banks, and the Scottish One Pound note should be accepted by English banks, but might be accepted by business and trades people in England.
Tenners were and still are British ten pound notes
They never were, they are still used today.
The Bank of England did issue £500 notes between 1725 and 1943. They remained legal tender until April 1945, although they are still valid notes which can be exchanged by the Bank of England for modern notes. Because of their rarity, they are worth considerably more than £500. The highest value current English note is £50. Scotland and Northern Ireland both produce £100 notes - which are the highest value legal tender Pound Sterling notes.
Yes they are. Yes they are.
You would have to pay them in to a bank (if you still can).
Yes, Scotland is part of the United Kingdom which uses the British Pound as it's official currency. The United Kingdom is not part of the European Union, which uses the Euro.
Yes, £1 notes are still legal tender in Scotland. They are still in circulation and still issued, although they aren't frequently used.
There is no difficulties with using Bank of England notes in Northern Ireland. The currency is GPB, and while local banks can issue their own notes (as they can in Scotland), these notes are still Sterling.