Most of the earths population has never been on the reverse of a Bank of England banknote.
Queen Elizabeth II was the first Monarch to appear on any Bank of England banknote, and she has never been on the reverse either.
Albert Einstein has never appeared on a Bank of England banknote.
Yes. Florence Nightingale was on the reverse of the Bank of England Series D Ten Pound note. The note was first issued in 1975, last issued in 1992 and ceased to be legal tender in 1994.
No he hasn't because he's German and only English people have appeared on them
Pocahontas
no
An image of Scottish economist Adam Smith is on the back of current Bank of England £20 notes.
Any banknote with a "genuine" printing flaw would have some value, above the usual, as a collectible banknote. Genuinely flawed notes are not necessarily known about or documented until somebody turns up with one, since they are an "accident" of the printing process, and have escaped detection during quality control at the printing works therefore, a valuation cannot be anticipated. A reputable coin dealer should be able to identify and confirm the note as genuine and make a valuation.
Pocahontas never came back from England. She died Gravesend, Kent, England of unknown causes.
MBNA bank was founded in 1982 and back then it had it's headquarters located in Wilmington, Delware. Nowadays MBNA bank has more headquarters for example in England and Canada.
For the Bank of England (or all banks) to produce money, they need gold to "back it up", you can't just produce banknotes that are worth nothing. Bank of England owns approx. £91-92 billion ($140 billion, €105 billion) worth of Gold ingots, so that's about your answer
At the Bank of England site. See the related link below.
YesAll Euro notes have a map of Europe on the back, which includes the UK.