The Bank of England don't currently have £100 notes, but the Bank of Scotland do and they are red. The English £50 notes are red as well.
The Bank of Scotland, The Royal Bank of Scotland, and The Clydesdale Bank all issue £100 notes.
The 50 Pound notes of the UK are red.
Blue
£100
It weighs nothing because there is no such thing as a £100 note.
Yes, but it was different Europe started printing the 100 pound note in 1727 but it has since changed. The most recent one that you see now was made in 1987 check on wikipedia
Take a look at the related links below
The Bank of England does not currently issue a One Hundred Pound note and has no plans to do so in the foreseeable future.
No. There are 100 Pence in a Pound. 50 Pence is one tenth of Five Pounds.
British Pound denominations currently in circulation include - One Pound coin Two Pound coin Five Pound coin (legal tender and often found in circulation) Five Pound note Ten Pound note Twenty Pound note Fifty Pound note
From 1992, the Ten pound note is mostly orange. From 1962 to 1991, the Ten pound note is mostly brown. Prior to 1962, the Ten Pound note was white.
A five pound note (or a £5 note) is a banknote worth £5. If this is a modern note, it is probably a British £5 note.
Paper notes were printed in denominations between £20 and £1000 from as early as 1855.
sir Benjamin poolon invented the cash note because when he was 4 , he started being intreseted in old coins and money. Then in 1236 when he was 14 he created the 50 pound note that then was closley followed by the 20 pound note the 5 pound note and the ten pound note.
The Bank of England issued the last One Pound note in 1984, then withdrew and demonetised the One Pound note in 1988, after it was replaced by the One Pound coin in 1983.