Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Bank of England £5 note, also known as a fiver, is a sterling banknote.It is the smallest denomination of banknote currently issued by the Bank of England.On 5 June 2024 and 13 September 2016, a new polymer note was introduced, featuring the images of King Charles III and the late Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse and a portrait of Winston Churchill on the reverse.
The Series B note was replaced in turn on 21 February 1963 by the Series C £5 note which for the first time introduced the portrait of the monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, to the £5 note (the Queen's portrait having first appeared on the Series C ten shilling and £1 notes issued in 1960). The Series C £5 note was withdrawn on 31 August 1973. On ...
Five pound note issued at Wellington 30 November 1855. The Colonial Bank of Issue was a New Zealand state owned bank that operated between 1847 and 1856 in an early unsuccessful attempt to create a government-owned issuer of bank notes in New Zealand.
The pound sterling banknotes in current circulation consist of Series G Bank of England notes in denominations of £5, £10, £20 and £50. The obverse of these banknotes issued through 4 June 2024 feature the portrait of Elizabeth II originally introduced in 1990.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726
Ghanaian £5 note; Irish pound. Series A IR£5 note; Series B IR£5 note; Series C IR£5 note; Israeli IL5 note and coin; Jamaican £5 note; Libyan £L5 note; Maltese £M 5 note; New Brunswick £5 note; New Zealand £NZ 5 note; Nigerian £5 note; Nova Scotian £5 note; Palestinian £P5 note; Prince Edward Island £5 note; Rhodesia and Nyasaland ...
Turing's image joins that of Winston Churchill on the five-pound note, novelist Jane Austen on the 10-pound note and artist J. M. W. Turner on the 20-pound note.
[29] [30] [31] The centenary of George's birth was celebrated in 1881 at Crystal Palace by 15,000 people, [32] and it was George who was featured on the reverse of the Series E five pound note issued by the Bank of England between 1990 and 2003. [33] The Stephenson Railway Museum in North Shields is named after George and Robert Stephenson. [34]