If by "large" Five Pound note you mean the white type printed on only one side, dimensions about 211mm by 133mm, they last issued in 1957 and ceased to be legal tender in 1961.
There were 1 million George Best Five Pound notes printed.
1793.
Therre are no "red indians" on Bank of England Five Pound notes.
The Bank of England currently issues Five Pound, Ten Pound, Twenty Pound and Fifty Pound notes for Britain, plus a variety of banknotes for a number of other countries.
If you refer to Bank of England banknotes, those currently in circulation include the Five, Ten, Twenty and Fifty Pound notes.
The Bank of England white Five Pound note was first issued in 1793, last issued in 1957 and ceased to be legal tender in 1961.
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.
In mid-2002, the Bank of England withdrew a batch of Five Pound notes due to the ink on the serial numbers smudging and being able to be rubbed off.
Australia's (Commonwealth of Australia) first banknotes were issued in 1913 and included the Ten Shilling, One Pound, Five Pound and Ten Pound notes.
The currency of the UK is the Pound Sterling (or more normally, just Pound). The Bank of England produces all of the banknotes for England and Wales, whilst several banks in Northern Ireland and Scotland produce notes to their own designs. Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man also issue their own notes. The only notes in current issue in England are £5, £10, £20 and £50. Scotland, Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man also have £1 notes. Scotland and Northern Ireland also issue £100 notes.
No. See the link below for info on obsolete large denomination notes.
cease