Jan Majstršín
See the link below to the Reserve Bank of Australia for design features of the current Australian One Hundred Dollar note and all other current Australian banknotes.
Australia does not have a "percent" note. Current circulating Australian banknotes are the Five, Ten, Twenty, Fifty and One Hundred Dollar notes.
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See the link below to the Reserve Bank of Australia for details of the current Australian Five Dollar note.
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The character on the holographic window of the Australian One Hundred Dollar note is a "Lyre Bird". These are part of the security devices included on all current Australian polymer banknotes.
Have another look. The Queen is not on the Australian Ten Dollar note, only the polymer Five Dollar note issued since 1992. Prior to the issue of polymer notes, she appeared on the paper One Dollar note issued from 1966.
Australia puts famous or historically significant Australian identities on its banknotes. The original paper Australian Ten Dollar note first issued in 1966, had Francis Howard Greenaway (convict architect) on the front and Henry Lawson (Short story writer & poet) on the back. The 1988 trial of the polymer note was a commemorative for Australia's Bicentenary and had a scene of the HMS Supply landing in Sydney Cove on the front and Aboriginal art on the back. The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note first issued in 1993, has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Patterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back.
The Australian One Pound note was first issued in 1913 and last issued in 1963. It was replaced by the Two Dollar note at Australia's conversion to decimal currency on the 14th of February, 1966. One Pound was equal to 20 Shillings or 240 Pence in the predecimal currency. The year of issue has never been printed on Australian banknotes. To determine the rough date of issue, you need to find the names of the two signatories on the note, and the serial number. Any valuation of an Australian banknote would depend on the condition of the note, the names of the two signatories and the serial number.
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The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Paterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back. The $10 note only has the words "Waltzing Matilda" on it. The text along the bottom of the note are excerpts from "The Man From Snowy River". "Waltzing Matilda" and "The Man From Snowy River" are both the work of Banjo Paterson.