The Bank of England did issue £500 notes between 1725 and 1943. They remained legal tender until April 1945, although they are still valid notes which can be exchanged by the Bank of England for modern notes. Because of their rarity, they are worth considerably more than £500.
The highest value current English note is £50. Scotland and Northern Ireland both produce £100 notes - which are the highest value legal tender Pound Sterling notes.
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.
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.
The Australian Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes were withdrawn from circulation in 1945.
no
The Bank of England One Hundred Pound note was last issued in 1943 and ceased to be legal tender in 1945. The Bank of England has no current plans to reintroduce the One Hundred Pound note in the immediate future.
Such a banknote does not exist. The Australian One Hundred Dollar note was first issued in 1984.
The face value of a Scottish banknote is exactly the same as the face value of the same denomination of English banknote.
The Bank of England Five Pound note, as are all Bank of England banknotes, is made from cotton and fibre manufactured under extremely high pressures. It is the Five Pound note that is used in general circulation. The Royal Mint produces a cupro-nickel Five Pound coin as a commemorative. The coin is legal tender but is not intended as a general circulation coin and many businesses will not accept them.
If you refer to currency, it would possibly refer to the first of a type or issue of Pound coin or banknote.
Current Bank of England banknotes include the Five, Ten, Twenty and Fifty Pound notes. Prior to decimalisation, 20th century Bank of England banknotes included the Ten Shilling, One, Five, Ten, Twenty, Fifty, One Hundred, Two Hundred, Five Hundred and One Thousand Pound notes. The Ten pound and higher notes were discontinued in 1945.
Expressed in figures, this is equal to £500,050.
The highest denomination of New Zealand banknote is currently the One Hundred Dollar note. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has no plans to introduce a Two Hundred Dollar banknote in the foreseeable future.