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No. The One Pound note ceased to be legal tender in March 1988.
The British One Pound coin, as distinct from the "Sovereign" coin, was introduced in 1983 to replace the Bank of England One Pound note. See the link below.
Paper notes were printed in denominations between £20 and £1000 from as early as 1855.
Pam West or Colin Narbeth (both UK-based) are the well known note dealers. Google them to get details.
GBP currency notes are printed in 5, 10, 20 and 50 pound denominations.
A ten shilling note (not a pound note) only has prefixes up to M and not X. Is the number you have stated correct? A similar note with number X22A 890058 would be worth around £3 - £5 if in mint condition (these notes were issued between 1970 and 1980 in the UK).
1 UK Pound is equal to 16 Ounces.
150 U.S. dollars = 103.36 British (UK) pounds as of 12th June 2010, note: exchange rates change daily.
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.
These are the dimentions of the current British £10 note, known as a tenner. It is 142 milimetres wide and 75 milimetres high.Here are the dimentions of the current British £20 note. It is 149 milimetres wide and 80 milimetres high.
It was green and it was bigger than the current new style design. In fact, it was the biggest of all the notes in circulation then.