obsolete Israeli Pound banknotes
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Convert your leftover obsolete Israeli Pound banknotes to cash using our hassle-free online exchange service. Get paid fast for your unused currency from Israel.
These Israeli Pound banknotes were the first banknotes issued by the Bank of Israel. They were in use from 1955 until 1980. These Israeli ‘Lirot’ are no longer in use and the Lira has become an obsolete currency. However we continue to exchange obsolete Israeli Pound banknotes.
In addition to Israeli Pound banknotes we also exchange Israeli Old Shekel and Israeli New Shekel, both banknotes as well as shekel and agorot coins.
Do you have obsolete Israeli Pound banknotes like the ones in the pictures below? Add the amount you want to exchange to your Wallet. You'll see exactly how much money you'll get for your Israeli Pounds. Click on the Wallet symbol to complete checkout and get paid within 5 days of receiving your currencies.
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500 Israeli Lirot banknote (David Ben Gurion)
The banknote of I£500 Lirot features the portrait of Israel’s first Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion. In the background is the library at Ben-Gurion’s home, the kibbutz of Sde Boker, in the Negev desert in southern Israel. On the back side of the 500 ILP bill from 1975 is an image of the Golden Gate, the … ContinuedYou get: £0.205001 ILP = £0.0004100000 -
100 Israeli Lirot banknote (Theodor Herzl)
The old I£100 Israeli Pounds banknote (Israeli Lirot) has the portrait of the founder of the Zionist Organization, Theodor Herzl. In the background is the entrance to the site of Israel’s national cemetery, Mount of Remembrance, named in Herzl’s honour as “Mount Herzl”. On the back side of the 1973-dated note is the text “Bank … ContinuedYou get: £0.041001 ILP = £0.0004100000 -
50 Israeli Lirot banknote (Chaim Weizmann)
Israel’s first President, Chaim Weizmann, is pictured on the banknote of I£50 Iraeli Lirot. In the background of his portrait is an image of the Wix Library in the Weizmann Institute of Science named after him. The back side of the 50 Israeli Pounds banknote shows an image of Damascus Gate, one of the main … ContinuedYou get: £0.020501 ILP = £0.0004100000 -
10 Israeli Lirot banknote (Sir Moses Montefiore)
Sir Moses Haim Montefiore, financier and banker, is featured on the old I£10 Lirot note from Israel. Next to his portrait on the front side is an image of Montefiore Windmill. The back side of the 1973-dated purple-coloured banknote shows Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City, one of the original gates built around 1540 by … ContinuedYou get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0020000000 -
5 Israeli Lirot banknote (Henrietta Szold)
Henrietta Szold, founder of Hadassah , the Women’s Organization of America, is pictured on this banknote of 5 Israeli lirot from 1973. On the back side of the old I£5 ILP note is an image of Lions’ Gate, the only east facing gate in the wall of the Old City of Jerusalem.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0040000000 -
10 Israeli Lirot banknote (type 1968)
On the front side of Israel’s 10 Lirot banknote from 1968 is the portrait of Jewish poet Chaim Nahman Bialik. The poet’s house in Tel Aviv is featured on the back side. The text on the note is in Hebrew except for the text in English reading “Bank of Israel”.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0020000000 -
5 Israeli Lirot banknote (Albert Einstein)
The most striking feature of the I£5 Lirot banknote from Israel is the famous portrait of theoretical physicist and Nobel Laureate Albert Einstein. The bunker-like building on the back of the 1968-dated Israeli five lirot bill houses an atomic reactor, located in the Soreq Nuclear Research Center near Yavne.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0040000000 -
50 Israeli Lirot banknote (Menorah)
This red-brown coloured banknote of I£50 Israeli Lirot from 1960 shows a young man and young woman pictured on the front side, with a settlement in the background. The back side of this Bank of Israel 50 pounds note shows a mosaic of a Menorah in the Hammam Lif Synagogue in Hamman-lif (Tunisia).You get: £0.020501 ILP = £0.0004100000 -
10 Israeli Lirot banknote (Scientist)
The lilac and purple-coloured banknote of 10 Israeli Lirat shows a scientist at work at a laboratory. On the back side of the old I£10 ILP bill is an image of one of the Dead Sea scrolls, the ancient Jewish religious manuscripts found in the Qumran Caves near the Dead Sea.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0020000000 -
5 Israeli Lirot banknote (Workman)
On the banknote of I£5 Israeli Pounds is the image of a workman in front of an industrial site. The back side of the 1958-dated 5 Lirot bill from the Bank of Israel shows the Seal of Shema that was found in the biblical city of Meggido in 1903.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0040000000 -
1 Israeli Lira banknote (Fisherman)
This I£1 Lira banknote from Israel features a fisherman with fishing net and anchor, with fishing boats in the background. On the back side of the 1958-dated 1 lira bill is a fragment of the synagogue mosaic discovered in Isfiya in 1930, as part of an excavation unearthing the 5th century Jewish town of Husifah.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0200000000 -
1/2 Israeli Lira banknote (Tombs of the Sanhedrin)
The banknote of 1/2 Israeli Lira features a woman soldier with a basket of oranges. On the back of the half pound note, the value of which is equivalent to 50 agorot, is an image of the entrance to the Tombs of the Sanhedrin, an underground complex of rock-cut tombs.You get: £0.020001 ILP = £0.0400000000