No. The highest-value note ever made was the $100,000 bill. It had a picture of Woodrow Wilson on it.
Officially, that would be the pentaseratops (dinosaur). Unoffially, that would be the newly discovered dinosaur, Eotriceritops, whose skull was the size of a Hummer.
It's not even close. At it's most expansive, the Roman Empire was about 5 million square kilometers (2 million square miles). The United States is far larger, at 9.8 million square kilometers (3.8 million square miles). In addition to the US, the modern countries of Russia, China, Canada, Brazil and Australia are all larger than the Roman Empire ever was.
Famous novelist john Steinbeck said this in his description of world war 2. Its seems a fair epitaph - at least 55 million people died as a direct result because of it
No African country has ever hosted the olympics
The Middle Passage was the section of the trade routes from the fifteenth through eighteenth centuries in which African peoples were transported across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas. While many of the Africans died, the numbers are estimated at close to 2 million rather than one billion.
The largest US bill ever printed was $100,000, and these were only used inside the government. "Million dollar" and larger bill are joke items sold in novelty shops, etc. for a few bucks. They're worth about as much as the paper they're printed on.
There's never been a US $1 million bill. The largest bill ever printed was $100,000 and they were only for use by the Federal Reserve System. They were never put into circulation.
YES
As genuine currency, no. The largest real bill ever printed was $100,000.
No. The largest denomination the U.S. ever printed was $100,000.
Any U.S. million dollar bill you might find is only a novelty and is NOT legal tender.
It's not worth anything, because there's no such thing as a real million dollar bill. It's a novelty. The largest denomination ever printed was $100,000.
Only as a novelty. The largest real denomination ever printed was $100,000.
No one's picture is on a US million dollar bill because that denomination doesn't exist. Any "million dollar" bills you may see are well-known novelty items that sell for a few bucks online and in gift shops. The largest bill printed for circulation was worth $10,000, and the largest bills ever printed were a set of special $100,000 gold certificates made for internal bank transfers.
The one million dollar bill is a novelty or fantasy note produced by private parties. No one million dollar bill was ever issued by the U.S. Treasury or the Federal Reserve. The largest bill ever produced in the U.S. was the non-circulating $100,000 note. Used strictly for bank to bank exchange. (Woodrow Wilson is the President on the $100,000 bill.)
No. The largest denomination the U.S. ever printed was $100,000. Any million dollar bill you might find is a novelty only worth its weight in paper.
No, nor has a genuine million dollar bill ever been printed in any year.