Almost all money in British colonies or ex-British colonies has Queen Elizabeth II's image on it. The Eastern Caribbean is a British colony.
Because Belize is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations, and thus, Queen Elizabeth II is the head of state.
Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom is on the New Zealand twenty dollar note. The first edition of the note also featured a watermark with a portrait of Captain James Cook.
The New Zealand Ten Dollar note featuring Queen Elizabeth II looking to the left on the obverse and a Kea on the reverse, Chief Cashier H R Hardie, serial 30B, would have been issued in 1980 or 1981.
The 'Rifleman', NZ's smallest bird, was pictured on the NZ$2 note but this note was removed from circulation in 1991 and replaced with a $2 coin. The bird depicted on the $2 coin is the Kotuku (White Heron).
No. Sir Edmund Hillary is featured on the New Zealand Five Dollar note.
If you are talking about what the birds are on the New Zealand notes (money); On the back of the 20 dollar note is the Karearea bird On the back of the 10 dollar note is Whio but the question is why, why are they in it??
Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom is on the New Zealand twenty dollar note. The first edition of the note also featured a watermark with a portrait of Captain James Cook.
she is queen Elizabeth
shes the queen of Belize
The New Zealand Ten Dollar note featuring Queen Elizabeth II looking to the left on the obverse and a Kea on the reverse, Chief Cashier H R Hardie, serial 30B, would have been issued in 1980 or 1981.
The latest 5 dollar note features Queen Elizabeth II.
Because the Queen is the Sovereign of New Zealand (and many other places)
Queen Elizabeth II appears on the obverse of the Australian Five Dollar note. She is the nominal or titular head of state of Australia.
The latest 5 dollar note features Queen Elizabeth II.
its queen Elizabeth II on the front and on the back is the Parlament house
New Zealand being a member of the Commonwealth, has Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse of all coins since 1953. The reverse of the New Zealand 10 cent coin has a carved Maori mask called a "koruru".
Australian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a building).Bahamian five dollar note: Obverse: Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield. Reverse: (no face; a building).Bahraini five dollar note: Obverse: Sir Frank Worrell. Reverse: (no face; a building).Belize five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; several mixed images).Bermudian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; several buildings).Brunei five dollar note: Obverse: Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah. Reverse: (no face; rainforest).Canadian five dollar note (1954 series): Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Otter Falls).Canadian five dollar note (1969 series, 1986 series, 2001 series): Obverse: Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Reverse: (no face; a boat, a kingfisher and children playing ice hockey, repsectively).Cayman Islands five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a schooner).East Carribean five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a building).Fijian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Nadi International Airport).Guyanese five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of bank, Kaieteur Falls). Reverse: (no face; sugar harvesting and wheat processing scenes).Hong Kong five dollar coin (pre1980 series): Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Royal Emblem of Hong Kong/value).Jamaican five dollar note: Obverse: Norman Manley. Reverse: (no face; coat of arms of Jamaica).Liberian five dollar note: no information found in research. Please insert information as appropriate should you find it.Namibian five dollar coin: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of Namibia). Reverse: (no face; eagle or hawk).New Zealand five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: Sir Edmund Hillary.Singaporean five dollar note: President Yusof bin Ishak. Reverse: (no face; Garden City).Solomon Islands five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of Solomon Islands). Reverse: (no face; a wooden hut).Surinamese five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; a building). Reverse: (no face; a river and palm tree).Taiwanese new five dollarUnited States five dollar note: Obverse: Abraham Lincoln. Reverse: (no face; Lincoln Memorial).The Cook Islands dollar has no five dollar denomination in either coin or note. The Kiribati dollar has no denomination of its own above the $2 coind, and Australian notes are circulated.
Queen Elizabeth II has appeared on the obverse of all Australian coins since 1953. The Australian One Pound note featured Queen Elizabeth II from 1953 until their last printing prior to the introduction of decimal currency. All years of issue of the Australian One Dollar note featured Queen Elizabeth II until the final issue in 1982. With the exception of the 2001 Centenary of Federation Five Dollar note, all Australian polymer Five Dollar notes have featured Queen Elizabeth II from 1992 to present.