It was in Ancient China and made of silk.
Australia has never produced a Twenty-Five Pound note.
Some currency experts consider the first federally-issued $1000 bill to be an interest-bearing note printed in 1861 to help finance the Civil War. The first true federal note of that denomination, though, was a United States Note issued the next year, 1862.
Priceless. The first Federal Reserve Notes were printed in 1914.
The husband's name goes first: Mr. & Mrs. John Doe.
The letter 'I' on a Federal Reserve Note indicates that the note was printed in Minneapolis.
note
The first $20 FRN was printed in 1914. Unlike modern Federal Reserve Notes the bills had red seals; seal colors weren't standardized until 1928.
The Australian One Dollar note was first printed in 1966 for the introduction of decimal currency. Subsequently, they were printed in 1968, 1969, 1972, 1974, 1976, 1979 and finally in 1982 before they were replaced with the One Dollar coin in 1984.
There is indeed a collector's edition of the first volume of Death Note, first printed in September 2008, which includes color pages, and a hard cover decorated with artwork specifically created for the special edition.
The Australian Two Dollar note was first printed in 1966 for the introduction of decimal currency. Subsequently, they were printed in 1967, 1968, 1972, 1974, 1976, 1979, 1983 and finally in 1985 before they were replaced with the Two Dollar coin in 1988.
The U.S. has never printed a $1 million note so none of them are real. The largest note printed by the U.S. was a $100,000 note with President Woodrow Wilson's portrait on it (Series 1934). However, these were only used for transactions between Federal Reserve Banks and were not available to the general public. The largest bill currently printed is the $100 bill with a portrait of Benjamin Franklin.
$100