Chinese coins

Chinese coins

Ancient Chinese coins were produced continuously for around 2,500 years by casting in moulds, rather than being struck with dies as with most western coins.

Collectors can obtain affordable yet old, beautiful, and interesting coins associated with all the main periods of Chinese history. Many appreciate the fine calligraphy and the patina accumulated by these coins over the centuries. Numismatists find many challenges in attributing both ancient and comparatively recent coinage. The rise and fall of the quality of the coinage reflects the fortunes of the successive dynasties in Chinese history.

Pre-Imperial (770-220 BC)

The earliest coinage of China was described by Sima Qian, the great historian of c.100 BC:

"With the opening of exchange between farmers, artisans, and merchants, there came into use money of tortoise shells, cowrie shells, gold, 钱 "qian" (coins), 刀 " dao" (knives), and 布 "bu" (spades) This has been so from remote antiquity."

While nothing is known about the use of tortoise shells as money, gold and cowries (either real shells or replicas) were used to the south of the Yellow River. Although there is no doubt that the well-known spade and knife money were used as coins, it has not been demonstrated that other items often offered by dealers as coins such as fish, halberds, and metal chimes were also used as coins. They are not found in coin hoards, and the probability is that all these are in fact funerary items. Archaeological evidence shows that the earliest use of the spade and knife money was in the Spring and Autumn period (770-476 BC). As in Ancient Greece, socio-economic conditions at the time were favourable to the adoption of coinage.

Cowries

Inscriptions and archaeological evidence show that cowrie shells were regarded as important objects of value in the Shang dynasty (c.1766-1154 BC). In the Zhou period, they are frequently referred to as gifts or rewards from kings and nobles to their subjects. Later imitations in bone, stone or bronze were probably used as money in some instances.

Similar bronze pieces with inscriptions, known as 蚁鼻钱 "Yi Bi Qian" (Ant Nose Money) or 鬼脸钱 "Gui Lian Qian" (Ghost Face Money) were definitely used as money. They have been found in areas to the south of the Yellow River corresponding to the State of Chu in the Warring States period. One hoard was of some 16,000 pieces. Their weight is very variable, and their alloy often contains a high proportion of lead. The name Ant (and) Nose refers to the appearance of the inscriptions, and is nothing to do with keeping ants out of the noses of corpses.

Gold

The only minted gold of this period known is Chu Gold Block Money, which consists of sheets of gold 3-5mm thick, of various sizes, with inscriptions consisting of square or round stamps in which there are one or two characters. They have been unearthed in various locations south of the Yellow River indicating that they were products of the State of Chu. One of the characters in their inscription is often a monetary unit or weight which is normally read as yuan. Pieces are of a very variable size and thickness, and the stamps appear to be a device to validate the whole block, rather than a guide to enable it to be broken up into unit pieces. Some specimens have been reported in copper, lead, or clay. It is probable that these were funeral money, not circulating coinage, as they are found in tombs, but the gold coins are not.

Hollow handled spade money

Hollow handled spades are a link between weeding tools used for barter and stylised objects used as money. They are clearly too flimsy for use, but retain the hollow socket by which a genuine tool could be attached to a handle. This socket is rectangular in cross-section, and still retains the clay from the casting process. In the socket the hole by which the tool was fixed to its handle is also reproduced.

Prototype spade money

The shape and size of these items are close to the original agricultural implements. While some are perhaps robust enough to be used in the fields, others are much lighter and bear an inscription, probably the name of the city which issued it. Some of these objects have been found in Shang and Western Zhou tombs, so date from c.1200-800 BC. Inscribed specimens appear to date from c. 700 BC.

quare shoulder spades

This type of spade coin has square shoulders, a straight or slightly curving foot, and three parallel lines on the obverse and reverse. They are found in quantities of up to several hundreds in the area corresponding to the Royal Domain of Zhou (south Hebei and north Henan). Archaeological evidence dates them to the early Spring and Autumn period, around 650 BC onwards. The inscriptions on these coins usually consist of one character, which can be a number, a cyclical character, a place name, or the name of a clan. The possibility that some inscriptions are the names of merchants has not been entertained. The crude writing is that of the artisans who made the coins, not the more careful script of the scholars who wrote the votive inscriptions on bronzes. The style of writing is consistent with that of the middle Zhou period. Over 200 inscriptions are known; many have not been fully deciphered. The characters can be found on the left or the right of the central line and are sometimes inverted or retrograde. The alloy of these is coins is typically 80% copper, 15% lead, and 5% tin. They are found in hoards of hundreds, rather than thousands, sometimes tied together in bundles. Although there is no mention in the literature of their purchasing power, it is clear that they were not small change.

loping shoulder spades

Usually a sloping shoulder. The two outside lines on the obverse and reverse are at an angle. The central line is often missing. This type is generally smaller than the preceding types. Their inscriptions are clearer, and usually consist of two characters. They are associated with the Kingdom of Zhou and the Henan area. Their smaller size indicates that they are later in date than the square shoulder spades.

Pointed shoulder spades

This type of spade has pointed shoulders and feet, and a long hollow handle. There are three parallel lines on the obverse and reverse, and occasionally inscriptions. They are found in N.E. Henan and in Shanxi, territory of the Duchy of Jin, later to become Zhao. They are held to be somewhat later in date than the square shouldered spades. Their shape seems to be designed for ease of tying together in bundles, rather than developed from any particular agricultural instrument.

Flat handled spade money

These have lost the hollow handle of the early spades. They nearly all have distinct legs, suggesting that their pattern was influenced by the pointed shoulder Hollow Handled Spades, but had been further stylized for easy handling. They are generally smaller, and sometimes have denominations specified in their inscriptions as well as place names. This, together with such little evidence as can be gleaned from the dates of the establishment of some of the mint towns, show that they were a later development. Archaeological evidence dates them to the Warring States period (475-221 BC). Arched Foot spades have an alloy consisting of about 80% copper; for other types the copper content varies between 40% and 70%.

Arched foot spades

This type has an arched crutch, often like an inverted U. The shoulders can be rounded or angular. Denominations of half, one, or two "jin" are normally specified. They are associated with the State of Liang (also known as Wei) which flourished between 425 and 344 BC, and the State of Han.

pecial spades of Liang

Similar in shape to the Arched Foot spades. Their inscriptions have been the subject of much debate. All are now agreed that these coins were issued by the State of Liang, and the inscriptions indicate a relationship between the "jin" weight of the coins, and the "lie", another unit of weight or money.

Pointed foot spades

This type has pointed feet, and a square crutch; the shoulders can be pointing upwards or straight. They are a clear descendant of the pointed shoulder Hollow Handled Spade. The weight and size of the larger specimens is compatible with the one "jin" unit of the Arched Foot Flat Handled Spades; smaller specimens sometimes specify the unit as one "jin" or more often as a half "jin", but frequently do not specify a unit. This seems to imply that the half "jin" unit became the norm. They are associated with the State of Zhao, and their find spots are usually in Shanxi or Hebei provinces. They frequently have numerals on their reverses. The two character mint names mean that the cities that cast these coins can be identified with more certainty than those of earlier series.

quare foot spades

This type has square feet, a square crutch, and a central line on the obverse. The reverses are normally only three lines, apart from on spades produced by some mints in the state of Zhao that also produced pointed foot spades. These have numerals on the reverse. The mints that produced square foot spades are more numerous than those that produced the pointed foot spades. Their weights are compatible with the half "jin" denomination. They are associated with the states of Han, Zhao, Liang, Zhou, and Yan. Their find spots include the provinces of Inner Mongolia, Jilin, Hebei, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Shandong, Jiangsu, Anhui, Henan, and Zhejiang. The type is no doubt contemporary with the pointed foot spades; some mints issued both types, and the two are found together in hoards.

harp cornered spades

These form a distinct sub-series of the square foot spades. They differ slightly from the normal type as they have small triangular projections on the handle. The inscriptions of the three larger types include the characters "jin" and "nie". While "nie" was the name of a river in Henan, the character cannot be readily construed as part of a place name, as it found in conjunction with other place names such as Lu Shi and Yu. According to the Fang Yan (an ancient book on dialects), "nie" meant the same as "hua", money or coin. Thus the characters "jin nie" mean “metal coin”. The weights of the larger coins seem slightly higher than the 14 grams of the "jin" standard. Their find spots correspond with the states of Liang and Han.

"Dang Jin" spades

These constitute another sub-group whose inscriptions suggest equivalence between the units of two trading areas. Both the small and large coins have a character "jin" in their inscription. This is normally taken as being the same as the "jin" unit found on other flat handled spade coins. However, the 28 gram weight of these coins suggests that their unit was twice the 14 grams of the flat handled spade "jin", so perhaps it was a local unit of the area. The smaller coin is often found as two joined together at the feet. This is how they were cast, but it is not clear if they were intended to circulate like this. Their weight is between 7 and 8 grams, roughly a quarter of the larger coins, so the inscription indicating that four were equivalent to a jin is logical. Their obverse inscriptions are a matter of some debate. Taking a consensus, the most logical reading is: "Pei Bi Dang Jin" [City of] Pei coin equivalent to a "jin".

Round foot spades

Round handle, round shoulders, and round feet. A rare type.This type is represented by the coins of five cities in present day Shanxi, between the Fen and Yellow River. There are two sizes, the equivalent of the one "jin" and half "jin" denominations. They have various numerals on their reverses. One school of thought ascribes them to the States of Qin and Zhao at the end of the Warring States period; another to the State of Zhong Shan during the 4th century BC.

Three hole spades

Holes in the handle and feet. Round handle, round shoulders, and round feet. Another rare typeTwo sizes are found. The large size has the inscription 两 "Liang" on the reverse; the smaller 十二铢 "Shi er zhu" (12 zhu). As the "liang" unit of weight was divided into 24 "zhu", clearly the two sizes represent denominations of a “one” and of a “half”. They also have series numbers on the handle on the reverse. Like the Round Foot Spades, it is not definitely established which State issued them. Their find spots are in eastern Shanxi and Hebei. The mint names are cities that were occupied by both Zhong Shan and Zhao.

Knife money

Knife Money is much the same shape as the actual knives in use during the Zhou period. They appear to have evolved in parallel with the Spade money in the north-east of China.

Qi knives

These large knives are attributed to the State of Qi, and are found in the Shandong area. They do not appear to have circulated much outside of this area. Although there has been considerable controversy concerning the date of their issue, archaeology shows them to be products of the Warring States period. They are known as Three Character Knives, Four Character Knives and so on, according to the number of characters in their inscriptions. Some consider the three horizontal lines and the mark below on some reverses are part of the inscription. The inscription refers to the establishment of the State of Qi. This could have been in 1122 BC, 894 BC, 685 BC, or 386 BC, depending on how one interprets the early histories. The two later dates are the most likely for the introduction of these coins.The alloy of the Three Character Knives contains around 54% copper, 38% lead, and 8% tin. The Four and Five Character Knives contain about 70% copper.

Needle tip knives

This type of knife money is distinguished by their long pointed tip. They were unknown until 1932, when a hoard was unearthed at Chengde in Hebei province; later hoards have also been found in this area. It has been suggested that such knives were produced for the trade between the Chinese and the Xiongnu (Huns) who occupied this northern area at the time. It could be that this type was merely a local variation of the Pointed Tip knives, or that it was the original type that became modified as it was inconvenient to use. Some fifty inscriptions have been recorded, which consist of numbers, cyclical characters, and other characters, many of which have not been deciphered.

Pointed tip knives

The end of the blade is curved but lacks the long pointed tip of the type above. The find spots of this type of knife money in the north-east of China associate it with the State of Yan. In recent years, hoards of up to 2,000 of these knives have been made, sometimes tied together in bundles of 25, 50, or 100. Over 160 different inscriptions have been recorded. Some represent numbers or cyclical characters; many have not been deciphered. Unlike the hollow handle spade money, the characters have not been generally associated with known places names. Their sizes and weights (11 to 16 grams) are very variable, leading to various sub-types being proposed by various authorities.

Ming knives

These are generally smaller than Pointed Tip Knives, and their tips are more or less straight. This type of knife money takes its name from the character on the obverse, which has traditionally been read as 明" ming". Other proposals have been 易 "yi", 莒 "ju", 盟 "ming", and 召 "zhao". A mint for Ming knives was unearthed at Xiadu, to the south west of Peking. This was the site of Yi, capital of the State of Yan from 360 BC, so the reading of "yi" has found favour recently. Moulds have also been discovered in Shandong. These coins themselves have been found, often in great quantities, in the provinces of Hebei, Henan, Shandong, Shanxi, Shaanxi, and Manchuria, and even as far afield as Korea and Japan. They are found together with pointed and square foot spade money.Two different shapes of Ming knife are found. The first, presumably the earlier, is curved like the pointed tip knives. The second has a straight blade and often a pronounced angled bend in the middle. This shape is known as "qing", a chime stone.Their alloy contains around 40% copper; they weigh around 16 grams.A wide range of characters is found on the reverses of Ming knives. Some are single characters or numerals, similar to those found on the pointed tip knives. Two large groups have inscriptions that begin with the characters 右 "you" (right) or 左 "zuo" (left), followed by numerals or other characters. "You" has the subsidiary meaning of junior or west; "zuo" can also mean senior or east. (The excavations at Xiadu revealed in the inner city a "zuo gong" left-hand palace, and a "you gong" right-hand palace.) The similarities between the other characters in these two groups show that they were determined by the same system. A smaller group has inscriptions beginning with 外 "wai" (outside), but the other characters do not have much in common with the "you" and "zuo" groups. A fourth group has inscriptions beginning with an unclear character, and other characters similar to those found in the "you" and "zuo" groups. By analogy with the "wai", this unclear character has been read as 内 " nei" (inside) or 中 "zhong" (centre).

tate of Qi Ming knives (Boshan knives)

Their general appearance is similar to the Ming knives. The "ming" character is large and angular. They have extensive reverse inscriptions. A hoard of these knives was unearthed in the Jiaqing period (1796-1820) in Boshan in eastern Shandong. Later finds have been made in the same area. This area was part of the state of Qi; and their legends also refer to Qi. Between 284 and 279 BC, the State of Yan occupied most of the territory of Qi, and it is generally accepted that these coins come from this time. Otherwise, their reverse inscriptions, which appear to refer to place names, have not been satisfactorily deciphered. One reading gives the first character as "Ju" for Ju city.

traight knives

These are smaller knives, and their blades are not curved or only slightly curved.They were issued by a few places in the state of Zhao. This category includes some other smaller knives of various shapes. They are found in hoards with Ming knives.

Early round coins

The round coin, the precursor of the familiar cash coin, circulated in both the spade and knife money areas in the Zhou period, from around 350 BC. Apart from two small and presumably late coins from the State of Qin, coins from the spade money area have a round hole and refer to the "jin" and "liang" units. Those from the knife money area have a square hole and are denominated in "hua".

Circulation of early coins

Although for discussion purposes the Zhou coins are divided up into categories of knives, spades, and round coins, it is apparent from archaeological finds that most of the various kinds circulated together. A hoard found in 1981, near Hebi in north Henan province, consisted of: 3,537 Gong spades, 3 Anyi Arched Foot spades, 8 Liang "Dang Lie" spades, 18 Liang square foot spades and 1,180 Yuan round coins, all contained in three clay jars. Another example is a find made in Liaoning province in 1984, which consisted of 2,280 Yi Hua round coins, 14 spade coins, and 120 Ming knives. In 1960 in Shandong, 2 Yi Hua round coins were found with 600 Qi round coins and 59 Qi knives. At Luoyang a find was made in 1976 of 116 Flat handled Spades of various types (Xiangyuan, Lin, Nie, Pingyang, Yu, Anyang, and Gong), 46 Anzang round coins, 1 Yuan round coin, and small/sloping shoulder spades from Sanchuan, Wu, Anzang, Dong Zhou, Feng, and Anzhou.

Ban Liang coins

The Ban Liang coins take their name from their two character inscription 半两 "ban liang", which means half a "liang". The "liang", the Chinese ounce, consisted of 24 铢 "zhu", and was the equivalent of about 16 grams. Thus the original Ban Liang weighed the equivalent of 12 "zhu" - 8 grams; however, it kept this inscription even when its weight was later reduced. This means that Ban Liangs are found in a great variety of sizes and calligraphic styles, all with the same inscription, which are difficult to classify and to date exactly, especially those of unofficial or local manufacture. These coins were traditionally associated with Qin Shi Huang Di, the first Chinese Emperor, who united China in 221 BC. The History of Han says:

“When Qin united the world, it made two sorts of currency: that of yellow gold, which was called "yi" and was the currency of the higher class; and that of bronze, which was similar in quality to the coins of Zhou, but bore an inscription saying Half Ounce, and was equal in weight to its inscription.”
Archaeological evidence now shows that the Ban Liang was first issued in the Warring States period by the State of Qin, possibly as early as 378 BC. A remarkable find was some bamboo tablets amongst which were found regulations (drawn up before 242 BC) concerning metal and cloth money. A thousand coins, good and bad mixed, were to be placed in "pen" (baskets or jars) and sealed with the Seal of the Director. At Zhangpu in Shaanxi, just such a sealed jar, containing 1,000 Ban Liang of various weights and sizes, was discovered. 7 Ban Liang were found in a tomb datable to 306 BC.At the beginning of the Western Han Dynasty, c. 200 BC, the people were allowed to cast small light coins known as "yu jia", “elm seed” coins, as the heavy Qin coins were inconvenient. In 186 BC, the official coin weight was reduced to 8 "zhu", and in 182 BC, a "wu fen" (5 parts) coin was issued – this is taken to be 5 parts of a Ban Liang, ie 2.4 "zhu". In 175 BC, the weight was set at 4 "zhu". Private minting was permitted again, but with strict regulation of the weight and alloy. In 119 BC, the Ban Liang was replaced by the San Zhu, and then the Wu Zhu coin.

Western Han and the "Wu Zhu" coins

By this time, a full monetary economy had developed. Taxes, salaries, and fines were all paid in coins. An average of 220 million coins a year were produced. According to the History of Han, the Western Han was a wealthy period:

“The granaries in the cities and the countryside were full and the government treasuries were running over with wealth. In the capital the strings of cash had been stacked up by the hundreds of millions until the cords that bound them had rotted away and they could no longer be counted.”

On average, millet cost 75 cash and polished rice 140 cash a hectolitre, a horse 4,400-4,500 cash. A labourer could be hired for 150 cash a month; a merchant could earn 2,000 cash a month.Apart from the Ban Liang coins described previously, there were two other coins of the Western Han whose inscription denoted their weight:

The 三铢 San Zhu (Three Zhu – 1.95 grams) coin which was issued either between 140-136 BC, or between 119-118 BC. The records are ambiguous, but the later date is generally preferred.

The 五铢 Wu Zhu (Five Zhu – 3.25 grams). First issued in 118 BC, this inscription was used on coins of many regimes over the next 700 years. Sometimes Wu Zhus can be dated specifically from dated moulds that have been discovered, or from their find spots, but the majority cannot. Those of the Western Han Dynasty have a square top to the right hand component of "zhu"; on later coins, this is rounded. Only a few of the varieties that have been described by numismatists are included here.

Jun Guo Wu Zhu (118-115 BC). A large and heavy coin, with the edges not filed. Sometimes has a rimless reverse. Taken to be the earliest Wu Zhu. According to the History of Han, in 118 BC the Commanderies ("Jun") and Principalities ("Guo") were ordered to cast 5 "zhu" coins with a circular rim so that it would be impossible to clip them to glean a bit of copper.

Chi Ze Wu Zhu (115-113 BC).A lighter coin than the above, with filed edges. The Han records state that in 115 BC the mints in the capital were requested to cast "Chi Ze" coins, with one being worth five local coins. Only these were to circulate. "Chi Ze" means Red (or Shining) Edge, referring to the red copper showing when the edges were filed smooth. Some examples of this coin were found from the tomb of Liu Sheng, Prince of Chongsan, who died in 113 BC.

Shang Lin San Guan Wu Zhu (From 113 BC). The Three Offices of Shang Lin Park were the Office for Coinage, the Office for Sorting Copper, and the Office of Price Equalisation. Minting was now confined to the central authorities. These coins usually have a raised rim on the top of the hole on the obverse. Their quality was so high that forgery became unprofitable except to true artisans, great villains, or thieves. All earlier coins were to be melted down and the copper taken to Shang Lin.

Wu Zhu Coins from AD 25 Even after the end of the Wang Mang regime (see below), the coinage system remained in disarray. Cloth, silk and grain were used as money along with coins. However, cash was the normal measure of wealth and was used in large quantities. When Yang Ping (92-195) was in economic difficulties, he was offered a gift of one million cash. Wu Zhu coins continued to be issued, along with other coins, until the end of the sixth century. Some coins can be attributed to specific reigns or events; many can not.

Iron Wu Zhu, resembling the W. Han coin.Attributed to Gongsun Shu, who rebelled in Sichuan in AD 25, and issued iron coins, two being equal to one Jian Wu Wu Zhu. Head of the "zhu" component rounded. Typical of Eastern HanWu Zhus.In AD 30, a ditty was sung by the youths of Sichuan:“The yellow bull! the white belly! Let Wu Zhu coins return”. This ridiculed the tokens of Wang Mang and the iron coins of Gongsun Shu, which were withdrawn by the Eastern Han Emperor Guang Wu in the 16th year of Jian Wu (AD 40). The Emperor was advised that the foundation of the wealth of a country depends on a good political economy, which was found in the good old Wu Zhu coinage, and so reissued the Wu Zhu coins.

Si Chu (Four Corner) Wu Zhu. Four lines on reverse radiating from the corners of the hole.Attributed to the Eastern Han Emperor Ling, AD 186. The four lines are said to represent wealth flowing from a ruined city – an omen of the overthrow of the Han Dynasty.

Shu Wu Zhu. "Chuan" on the obverse, or the numbers 1-32 on the reverse, in incuse characters.Attributed to the Kingdom of Shu (221-265) by virtue of their find spots in Gansu.

Shen Lang (Lord Shen's) Wu Zhu. No "jin" component in "zhu".Attributed to Shen Chong of the House of Wu; cast after the foundation of the Eastern Jin Dynasty in 317. Also known as the Shen Chong Wu Zhu. An old ballad contains the lines

“Elm seeds countless press in sheets, Lord Shen’s green cash line town streets.”Apparently this means that Lord Shen’s cash were small and light.

Dang Liang (Worth Two) Wu Zhu. A large thick coin, with a nominal weight of 8 "zhu."Attributed to Emperor Wen of the Southern Dynasties Song Dynasty, who had it cast in 447 as a measure against coining malpractices.

Nu Qian. The Female Coin. No outer rim.

Tian Jian Wu Zhu. Inner rim on obverse. At the start of the Liang Dynasty, money was only used around the capital. Elsewhere grain and cloth were used for trade. In the south everyone used gold and silver. Therefore, in the 1st year of the Tian Jian period (502), the Emperor Wu cast Wu Zhu coins with an outer and inner rim. He also cast another sort without a rim called the female coin. The two sorts circulated together.

An iron Wu Zhu with four lines radiating from the corners of the hole on the reverse.Attributed to Emperor Wu of Liang in 523. By 535, the traders in Sichuan were complaining of the trouble of stringing together such a number of [cheap] coins, and of the large number of carts needed to transport them.

Liang Zhu (Two Pillar) Wu Zhu. A dot above and below the hole on the obverse.Attributed to Emperor Yuan of the Liang Dynasty in 552. It was intended to be the equivalent of ten ordinary coins.

Si Zhu (Four Pillar) Wu Zhu. Two dots on the obverse and reverse. Attributed to Emperor Jing of the Liang Dynasty in 557. Originally intended to be the equivalent of twenty ordinary coins, it soon became worth one. However, similar coins with dots have been found in tombs of a much earlier date.

Chen Wu Zhu. Stout outer rim, no inner rim. Top part of the zhu component square, bottom part roundAttributed to Emperor Wen of the Southern Dynasties Chen Dynasty. Cast from Tian Jia 3 (562) One was worth ten small goose-eye coins.

Yong Ping Wu Zhu. Characters long and thin.Attributed to Emperor Xuan of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Yong Ping period (510).

Da Tong Wu Zhu. Stout outer rim, inner rim only by the "wu". Crossing lines of "wu" straight.Attributed to Emperor Wen of the Western Wei Dynasty, Datong period (540).

Western Wei Wu Zhu. Crossing lines of "wu" straight, inner rim by the "wu" only. Previously attributed to the Sui Dynasty, coins of this distinctive type were found within the tomb of HouYi of the Western Wei (535-56).

Sui Wu Zhu. Hour glass "wu", inner rim by the "wu" only.First cast by Emperor Wen in 581. After introducing these new coins, the Emperor ordered all the frontiers to hand over 100 cash as samples in 583, and the next year strictly forbade the circulation of old coins and commanded that when this was disobeyed, the responsible officials should be fined half a years salary. 1,000 coins weighed 4 "jin" 2 "liang". Minting privileges were granted to several imperial princes during this reign.

Bai Qian (White Coin) Wu Zhu. Writing as above.The whitish colour of this coin is due to the addition of lead and tin to the alloy, which was done officially from 585.

Yan Huan (Fringe or Thread Ring) Wu Zhu. A Wu Zhu whose middle has been cut out to make two coins. Zao Bian (Chiselled Rim) Wu Zhu. The inner portion of a Wu Zhu whose outer portion has gone to make a Thread Ring . Surviving moulds show that some Wu Zhus were actually cast like this.

E Yan (Goose Eye) or Ji Mu (Chicken Eye).Names given to various diminutive Wu Zhu coins.A common type with sharp legends has been found in Western Han tombs of 73-33 BC.

Small coins with no characters.Traditionally ascribed to Dong Zhuo, who in 190 usurped the throne and melted down nine huge Qin Dynasty statues to make coins. Could well have been cast at other times.

Wang Mang

Wang Mang was a nephew of the Dowager Empress Wang, In AD 9, he usurped the throne, and founded the Xin Dynasty. He introduced a number of currency reforms which met with varying degrees of success. The first reform, in AD 7, retained the Wu Zhu coin, but reintroduced two versions of the knife money:
一刀平五千 Yi Dao Ping Wu Qian (One Knife Worth Five Thousand).The Yi Dao characters are inlaid in gold.

契刀五百 Qi Dao Wu Bai (Inscribed Knife Five Hundred).

Between AD 9 and 10 he introduced an impossibly complex system involving tortoise shell, cowries, gold, silver, six round copper coins, and a reintroduction of the spade money in ten denominations.

The Six Coins. AD 9-14.
* Xiao Quan Zhi Yi. Small Coin, Value One.
* Yao Quan Yi Shi. Baby Coin, Ten.
* You Quan Er Shi. Juvenile Coin, Twenty.
* Zhong Quan San Shi. Middle Coin, Thirty.
* Zhuang Quan Si Shi. Adult Coin, Forty.
* Da Quan Wu Shi, a round coin with a nominal value of fifty Wu Zhu.

The Ten Spades. AD 10-14.
* Xiao Bu Yi Bai. Small Spade, One Hundred.
* Yao Bu Er Bai. Baby Spade, Two Hundred.
* You Bu San Bai. Juvenile Spade, Three Hundred.
* Xu Bu Si Bai. Ordered Spade, Four Hundred.
* Cha Bu Wu Bai. Servant Spade, Five Hundred.
* Zhong Bu Liu Bai. Middle Spade, Six Hundred.
* Zhuang Bu Qi Bai. Adult Spade, Seven Hundred.
* Di Bu Ba Bai. Graduate Spade, Eight Hundred.
* Ci Bu Jiu Bai. Lower Spade, Nine Hundred.
* Da Bu Heng Qian. Large Spade, Weight One Thousand.

According to the History of Han:

The people became bewildered and confused, and these coins did not circulate. They secretly used Wu Zhu coins for their purchases. Wang Mang was very concerned at this and issued the following decree:

“Those who dare to oppose the court system and those who dare to use Wu Zhus surreptitiously to deceive the people and equally the spirits will all be exiled to the Four Frontiers and be at the mercy of devils and demons.”

The result of this was that trade and agriculture languished, and food became scarce. People went about crying in the markets and the highways, the numbers of sufferers being untold.

In AD 14, all these tokens were abolished, and replaced by another type of spade coin and new round coins.
货布 Huo Bu (Money Spade).
货泉 Huo Quan (Wealth/Money Coin).
According to Schjöth, Wang Mang wished to displace the Wu Zhu currency of the Western Han, owing, it is said, to his prejudice to the 金 " jin" radical in the character 铢 "zhu" of this inscription, which was a component part of the character Liu, the family name of the rulers of the House of Han, whose descendant Wang Mang had just dethroned. And so he introduced the "Huo Quan" currency. One of the reasons, again, that this coin circulated for several years into the succeeding dynasty was, so the chroniclers say, the fact that the character 泉 "quan" in the inscription consisted of the two component parts 白 "bai" and 水 "shui", which happened to be the name of the village, Bai Shui in Henan, in which the Emperor Guang Wu, who founded the Eastern Han, was born. This circumstance lent a charm to this coin and prolonged its time of circulation. The Huo Quan did indeed continue to be minted after the death of Wang Mang – a mould dated AD 40 is known.

布泉 Bu Quan (Spade Coin). Known later as the "Nan Qian", the Male Cash, from the belief that if a woman wore this on her sash, she would give birth to a boy.Eventually, Wang Mang's unsuccessful reforms provoked an uprising, and he was killed by rebels in AD 23.

The Three Kingdoms

In 220, the Han Dynasty came to an end, and was followed by a long period of disunity and civil war, beginning with the Three Kingdoms ("San Guo"), which grew out of the divisions within the Han Dynasty. These three kingdoms were the Wei in northern China, the Shu to the west, and the Wu in the east. The period was the golden age of chivalry in Chinese history, as described in the famous novel The Romance of the Three Kingdoms. The coinage reflected the unsettled times, with small and token coins predominating.

Kingdom of Wei (222-265)

This kingdom only issued Wu Zhu coins.

Kingdom of Shu (221-265)

The coins issued by this Kingdom were:
直百五铢 Zhi Bai Wu Zhu (Value One Hundred Wu Zhu). Often found with incuse characters on the reverse.

直百 Zhi Bai (Value One Hundred).When Liu Bei, later King of Shu and one of the heroes of The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, took Chengdu in Sichuan in 214, he was advised to issue “value one hundred” coins to overcome the problems of maintaining his troops; hence these coins are attributed to him.

太平百钱 Tai Ping Bai Qian (Taiping One Hundred Cash).
a) Rev: Stars and waves pattern.
b) Rev: Incuse characters.
c) Rev: Plain
The Tai Ping Bai Qian coin was at first attributed to Sun Liang of the Kingdom of Wu, who adopted a "Tai Ping" year title in 256. Most of them, however, have been unearthed in Sichuan (in one instance in a tomb dated to 227) together with Zhi Bai coins, which, together with the incuse marks on the reverse, indicates that they are issues of the Kingdom of Shu. The fancy calligraphy and reverses of the large coins are more typical of amulets than circulating coins, and Peng seeks to associate them with the Taiping Taoists of the time.

直一 Zhi Yi (Value One).
定平一百 Ding Ping Yi Bai (Ding Ping One Hundred).

In the 1860s, a jar of small “goose eye” coins was dug up in Chengdu in Sichuan. It contained Tai Ping Bai Qian, Ding Ping Yi Bai, Zhi Bai, and Zhi Yi coins. This reinforces the supposition that all these coins are near contemporaries, issued by the Kingdom of Shu.

Kingdom of Wu (222-280)

大泉五百 Da Quan Wu Bai (Large Coin Five Hundred).
大泉当千 Da Quan Dang Qian (Large Coin Worth a Thousand).
大泉二千 Da Quan Er Qian (Large Coin, Two Thousand).
大泉五千 Da Quan Wu Qian (Large Coin, Five Thousand.
Only six specimens known.

According to the records, in 236 Sun Quan, King of Wu, cast the Da Quan Wu Bai, and in 238 the Da Quan Dang Qian coins. The people were called upon to hand over the copper in their possession and receive back cash, and thus illicit coining was discouraged. These are coarse coins, cast in the capital Nanking or in Hubei. In 2000, clay moulds and other casting materials for Da Quan Wu Bai coins were discovered in the Western Lake, Hangzhou.

The Jin Dynasty and the 16 Kingdoms

Sima Yan founded the Jin Dynasty in AD 265, and after the defeat of the Kingdom of Wu in 280, China was reunified for a while. At first the dynasty was known as the Western Jin with Luo-yang as its capital; from 317, it ruled as the Eastern Jin from Nanking. The historical records do not mention the specific casting of coins during the Jin Dynasty. In the south, reductions in the weights of coins caused great price fluctuations, and cloth and grain were used as substitutes for coins. In the north, numerous independent kingdoms (The Sixteen Kingdoms) issued some interesting coins.

FORMER LIANG KINGDOM (301-76).
凉造新泉 Liang Zao Xin Quan (Liang Made New Coin).
Attributed to King Zhang Gui (317-376), who ruled in the north-western area.

LATER ZHAO KINGDOM (319-52).
丰货 Feng Huo (The Coin of Abundance). Seal Script, no rim.
Cast by King Shi Le in 319 at Xiangguo (now Xingtai in Hebei). Weight 4 "zhu". Known as the Cash of Riches - keeping the coin about one was said to bring great wealth. However the historical record states that the people were displeased, and that in the end the coin did not circulate.

CHENG HAN KINGDOM (303-47).
汉兴 Han Xing. Inscription right and left or above and below.
In 337, Li Shou of Sichuan adopted the period title of Han Xing. This is the first recorded use of a period title on a coin. The period ended in 343.

XIA KINGDOM (407-31).
太夏真兴 Tai Xia Zhen Xing c/wise. (Great Xia, Zhenxing [period] ).
Issued during the Zhenxing period (419-24) by Helian Bobo, probably at Xi’an.

The North and South Dynasties (420-581)

The North and South Dynasties era was another long period of disunity and strife. The north and south of China were each ruled by two separate successions of dynasties. During this period, coin inscriptions other than (nominal) weights, such as names or year titles, were introduced, although the Wu Zhu coin was still issued. Seal script remained the norm for inscriptions and some coins of highly regarded calligraphy were produced. However, the general coinage was of a very poor quality. In 465, permission was granted for the people to mint coins. A thousand of these “goose eye” coins which resulted made a pile less than three inches (76 mm) high. There were others, still worse, called “Fringe Rim” coins, which would not sink in water and would break in one’s hand. In the market, people would not bother counting them, but would pick them up by the handful. A peck of rice sold for 10,000 of these. Reforms by Emperor Ming from 465 onwards, had only a limited success in improving the quality of the coinage.

outhern Dynasties

SONG (420-79).
四铢 Si Zhu (Four Zhu). No inner rims on obverse.
Issued by Emperor Wen in 430, from the capital at Nanking. A Coinage Office was established under the Chamberlain for Palace Revenues.

孝建 Xiao Jian. Rev: 四铢 "Si Zhu" (Xiaojian [period] Four Zhu).
A poor coin, with many variations.
Issued by Emperor Xiao from 454. Actual weight nearer 2 "zhu."
Withdrawn by the Emperor Ming in 467.

景和 Jing He [period title] .
永光 Yong Guang [period title] .
两铢 Liang Zhu (Two "Zhu").
These three small coins, weighing only 2 "zhu", were all issued by Emperor Fei in 465. As the Jinghe and Yongguang periods only lasted for a few months, these coins are very rare. The Song capital was at Nanking.

LIANG (502-556).
太清丰乐 Tai Qing Feng Le (Tai Qing, Prosperous and Happy).
Attributed to the Tai Qing period (547-549) of Emperor Wu. A hoard was discovered in Jiangsu containing 4,000 Tai Qing Feng Le coins with various other sorts of coins showing this is not an amulet as had been claimed by some authorities.

CHEN (557-89).
太货六铢 Tai Huo Liu Zhu (The Large Coin Six "Zhu").
Issued by Emperor Xuan in 579. At first the coin was equivalent to ten Wu Zhus. Later the value was changed to one, and the contemporary saying “They cried before the Emperor, their arms akimbo” is said to refer to the discontent among the people caused by this. The seal character for "liu" suggests the “arms akimbo” posture. The coin was withdrawn in 582 when the Emperor died, and Wu Zhus were adopted. The Chen capital was Nanking.

Northern Dynasties

NORTHERN WEI (386-534).
太和五铢 Tai He Wu Zhu (Taihe [period] Wu Zhu).
Although the Northern Wei had been established in 386, its Turkish and Mongolian tribes had retained a nomadic way of life with no need for money until 495, when Emperor Xiao Wen issued this coin, probably at the capital Datong in Shanxi.

永安五铢 Yong An Wu Zhu (Yong An [period] Wu Zhu).
This coin was first issued in the autumn of the second year of Yongan (529) by Emperor Xiao Zhuang. It is said that it continued to be cast until 543 under the Eastern and Western Wei dynasties. During the Eastern Wei dynasty, private coins with nicknames such as Yongzhou Green-red, Liangzhou Thick, Constrained Cash, Auspicious Cash, Heyang Rough, Heavenly Pillar, and Red Halter circulated, all possibly Yong An Wu Zhus.

NORTHERN QI (550-77).
常平五铢 Chang Ping Wu Zhu (The Constant and Regular Wu Zhu).
Cast by Emperor Wen Xuan in 553. Finely made. The Northern Qi capital was Linzhang in Hebei. Under the Northern Qi, there was an Eastern and a Western Coinage Region, under the Chamberlain for Palace Revenues. Each Regional Director supervised 3 or 4 Local Services.

NORTHERN ZHOU (557-81).
布泉 Bu Quan (Spade Coin).
Issued in 561 by Emperor Wu. One was to be worth five Wu Zhus. Distinguish this coin from the Bu Quan of Wang Mang – the stroke in the middle of "quan" is continuous. Withdrawn in 576.
五行大布 Wu Xing Da Bu (The Large Coin of the Five Elements [metal, wood, water, fire, and earth] ).
Issued in 574 by Emperor Wu. Intended to be worth ten Bu Quans. Illegal coining soon produced specimens of a reduced weight, and the authorities banned the use of this coin in 576. This inscription is frequently found on amulets.
永通万国 Yong Tong Wan Guo (Everlasting Circulation in Ten Thousand Kingdoms).
Issued in 579 by Emperor Xuan. Its nominal weight was 12 "zhu", and the coin was meant to be equivalent to ten Wu Xing coins.

The above coins, the “Northern Zhou Three Coins” are written in the "Yu Zhu" (Jade Chopstick) style of calligraphy which is greatly admired.

3 and 4 Zhu Coins.
This small group of square and round coins, not always with a hole in the middle, are usually attributed to the time of the North and South Dynasties, as this was an unsettled period which produced some very poor coinage. The obverse inscriptions give a weight of 3 or 4 "zhu." The reverse inscriptions appear to be place names.

The Sui Dynasty

China was reunified under the Sui Dynasty (581-618). Under this short-lived dynasty, many reforms were initiated that led to the subsequent success of the Tang dynasty. The only coin associated with the Sui is a Wu Zhu coin. Additional mints were set up in various prefectures, typically with five furnaces each. Cash was frequently checked for quality by the officials. However, after 605, private coining again caused a deterioration of the coinage.

The Tang Dynasty

Tang issues

开元通宝 Kai Yuan Tong Bao (The Inaugural Currency).
This was the main coin issued by the Tang. It was cast for most of the dynasty, a period of nearly 300 years. It was first issued by the Emperor Gao Zu in the autumn of the 4th year of the Wu De period (August 621). Its diameter was to be 8 "fen". The weight was set at 2.4 "zhu", ten to the "liang". 1,000 coins weighed 6 "jin" 4 "liang." The legend was written by the famous calligrapher Ouyang Xun in a much admired mixture of the "Bafen" and "Li" (official or clerkly) styles of writing. This is the first to include the phrase tong bao, used on many subsequent coins. The inscription was used by other regimes in later periods; such coins can be distinguished from Tang coins by their workmanship. Minting and copper extraction were centrally controlled, and private casting was punishable by death. For the first time we find regulations giving the prescribed coinage alloy – 83% copper, 15% lead, and 2% tin. Previously the percentages used seem to have been on an ad hoc basis. Actual analyses show rather less copper than this.
A crescent-shaped mark is often found on the reverse of Kai Yuans. The legend is that the Empress Wende inadvertently stuck one of her fingernails in a wax model of the coin when it was first presented to her, and the resulting mark was reverentially retained. Other imperial ladies have also been proposed as the source of these nail marks, especially the Imperial Consort Yang. Peng explores the possibility of a foreign source for them. More prosaically, they appear to be a control system operated by the mint workers.
At first, mints were set up in Luoyang in Henan, and also in Peking, Chengdu, Bingzhou (Taiyuan in Shanxi), and then Guilin in Guangxi. Minting rights were also granted to some princes and officials. By 660, deterioration of the coinage due to forgery had become a problem. The regulations were reaffirmed in 718, and forgeries suppressed. In 737, the first commissioner with overall responsibility for casting was appointed. In 739, ten mints were recorded, with a total of 89 furnaces casting some 327,000 strings of cash a year. 123 "liang" of metal were needed to produce a string of coins weighing 100 "liang". In the late 740s, skilled artisans were employed for casting, rather than conscripted peasants. Despite these measures, the coinage continued to deteriorate. In 808, a ban on hoarding coins was proclaimed. This was repeated in 817. Regardless of the rank of a person, they could not hold more than 5,000 strings of cash. Cash balances exceeding this amount had to be expended within two months to purchase goods. This was an attempt to compensate for the lack of cash in circulation. By 834, mint output had fallen to 100,000 strings a year, mainly due to the shortage of copper. Forgeries using lead and tin alloys were produced.
In 845, in the Huichang period, the Emperor Wu Zong, a fervent follower of Taoism, destroyed the Buddhist monasteries and used the copper bells, gongs, incense burners and statues to cast coins in various localities. These local mints were under the control of the provincial governors. The New Tang History states that Li Shen, governor of Huainan province, requested that the empire might cast coins bearing the name of the prefecture in which they were cast, and this was agreed. These coins with mint names on the reverses, known as Huichang Kai Yuans, are of poor workmanship and size compared with the early Kai Yuans. However, when Xuanzong ascended to the throne the next year, this policy was reversed, and the new coins were recast to make Buddhist statues.
Archaeological discoveries have assisted numismatists in dating various varieties of the Kai Yuan more closely.

Other Tang dynasty coins are:
乾封泉宝 Qian Feng Quan Bao.
Cast by the Emperor Gao Zong (649-83) in 666. In an attempt to overcome a shortage of copper, one of the Qian Feng coins was to be equivalent to ten old coins, although its weight of 2.4 "zhu" was the same as a one cash coin. This led to extensive forgery, and the coin was withdrawn after a year.

乾元重宝 Qian Yuan zhong bao.
Emperor Su Zong (756-62) issued the Qian Yuan coins to pay the army fighting against the rebels. Coins of the first issue, in 758, were the equivalent of 10 ordinary cash. Each coin weighed 1.6 "qian." The second issue, from 759, was of larger coins, one of which was to be the equivalent of 50 cash. These coins have a double rim on the reverse and are known as the "Zhong Lun" (Heavy Wheel) cash. Their weight was twice that of the 10 cash coins. After scenes that foreshadowed the Xianfeng period (1853), with hundreds of people executed for forgery, the large Qian Yuan coins were devalued to 30 cash. In 762, the smaller coins were devalued to 2 cash, and the Heavy Wheel cash to 3 cash. Small Qian Yuans, worth one Kai Yuan, were also issued.

Xinjiang issues

Judging by their find spots, these coin were cast by the local government in the Kuche area of Xinjiang in around 760-780.
大历元宝 Da Li yuan bao.
Da. A degenerate form of the above – only the da included.
Yuan. Similar, with only the yuan included.
建中通宝 Jian Zhong tong bao.
The Jian Zhong Period was 780-83.
Zhong above the hole. A degenerate form of the above.

Tang rebels

In 755, a revolt started in the north-west of China. The capital, Luoyang, was taken, and the Emperor fled to Sichuan. One of the rebels, Shi Siming, issued coins at Luoyang from 758. Shi was killed in 761, and the revolt was eventually suppressed in 763 with the help of foreign troops.
得壹元宝 De Yi yuan bao.The inscription" De Yi" (Obtain Unity), which also implies “last for one year”, was felt to be inauspicious, and was changed to Shun Tian (the period title) in 759.
顺天 Shun Tian yuan bao.

The Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms

After the collapse of the Tang in 907, another period of disunity ensued. Five officially recognised dynasties ruled consecutively in the north (with capitals at Kaifeng or Luoyang in Henan), while ten different kingdoms held sway at different times in the south. A shortage of copper made it difficult to produce an adequate supply of coins. In 955, an Edict banned the holding of bronze utensils:

“From now on, except for court objects, weapons, official objects and mirrors, and cymbals, bells and chimes in temples and monasteries, all other bronze utensils are banned... Those who hoard more than 5 jin, no matter how much the amount, will be executed. Those who abetted them will be exiled for two years, followed by labour service for one year. Those around them will suffer 100 strokes of the cane. Informers will be rewarded with 30 strings of cash.”
The south enjoyed somewhat better political and economic conditions, and saw an advance in trade. A great variety of coinage, including large and base metal coins, was issued in this area.

The Five Dynasties

LATER LIANG DYNASTY (907-23).
开平通宝 Kai Ping tong bao.
There is also a "Kai Ping yuan bao" coin. These coins could have been issued by Zhu Wen when he overthrew the Tang in 907. However, only one specimen of each coin is known, and their authenticity is not certain.

LATER TANG DYNASTY (923-36).
天成元宝 Tian Cheng yuan bao.
Issued by Emperor Ming in the Tiancheng period (926-29).

LATER JIN DYNASTY (936-47).
天福元宝 Tian Fu yuan bao.
Issued by Emperor Gao Zong in the Tianfu period from 938. From 939, private casting was permitted for a few months, resulting in coins of adulterated alloy.

LATER HAN DYNASTY (948-51).
汉元通宝 Han Yuan tong bao.
The coin pattern is based on the Kai Yuan. In 948, during the reign of Emperor Gao Zu, the President of the Department of Imperial Feasts requested permission to set up a mint in the capital (Kaifeng, Henan). There is no specific record of casting Han Yuans.

LATER ZHOU DYNASTY (951-60).
周元通宝 Zhou Yuan tong bao.
These coins were issued by Emperor Shi Zong from 955. The pattern is also based on the Kai Yuan coin. They were cast from melted-down bronze statues from Buddhist temples. When reproached for this, the Emperor uttered a cryptic remark to the effect that the Buddha would not mind this sacrifice. It is said that the Emperor himself supervised the casting at the many large furnaces at the back of the palace. The coins have amuletic properties because they were made from Buddhist statues, and are particularly effective in midwifery – hence the many later-made imitations.

The Ten Kingdoms

FORMER SHU KINGDOM (907-25).
Issued by Wang Jian (907-18).
永平元宝 Yong Ping yuan bao.
通正元宝 Tong Zheng yuan bao.
天汉元宝 Tian Han yuan bao.
光天元宝 Guang Tian yuan bao.

Issued by Wang Yan, son of Wang Jian (919-25).
乾德元宝 Qian De yuan bao.
咸康元宝 Xian Kang yuan bao.
The coins of the Wang family were often of a very poor quality. Wang Jian began his career as a village thief; he enlisted as a soldier, rose through the ranks, and by 901 was virtually an independent ruler, with his capital at Chengdu in Sichuan. His regime provided a peaceful haven for artists and poets.

KINGDOM OF MIN (909-45).
Issued by Wang Shenzhi.
开元通宝 Kai Yuan tong bao. Rev: Large dot above. Iron. From 922.
The same coin cast in bronze is extremely rare.
开元通宝 Kai Yuan tong bao. Rev: 闽 Min (=Fujian area). Lead.
开元通宝 Kai Yuan tong bao. Rev: 福 Fu (Fu [zhou] ). Lead.
In 916, Wang Shenzhi, King of Min, minted a small lead Kai Yuan coin in Ninghua county, Dingzhou, Fujian, where deposits of lead had been discovered. The lead coins circulated together with copper coins.
Issued by Wang Yanxi.
永隆通宝 Yong Long tong bao. Rev: 闽 Min (Fujian area). Crescent below. Iron.
From 942. One of these large Yong Long coins was worth 10 small coins and 100 lead coins. A string of 500 of these poorly made Min iron coins were popularly called a "kao" (a manacle).

Issued by Wang Yanzheng.
天德通宝 Tian De tong bao. Iron.
When Wang Yanzheng was proclaimed Emperor, he changed the name of the kingdom to Yin, but later restored the name of Min. One of these iron coins, which were cast in 944, was worth 100 ordinary cash.

KINGDOM OF CHU (907-51).
Supreme Commander Ma Yin.
天策府宝 Tian Ce Fu Bao. Iron.
Ma Yin, originally a carpenter, was given the rank of Supreme Commander of Tiance, Hunan, by Emperor Ta Zu of the Liang Dynasty, and minted this coin in 911 to commemorate the event. Ma Yin later became King Wumu of Chu.
乾封泉宝 Qian Feng Quan Bao. Iron.
According to the histories, because there was much lead and iron in Hunan, Ma Yin took the advice of his minister Gao Yu to cast lead and iron coins at Changsha in 925. One of these was worth ten copper cash, and their circulation was confined to Changsha. Merchants traded in these coins, to the benefit of the State. In 2000, a hoard of over 3,000 of these coins was found near Changsha. Extremely rare bronze specimens are also known.
乾元重宝 Qian Yuan zhong bao.
This inscription is also found on Tang coins. This small lead coin is thought to have been issued by the Chu kingdom. Similar bronze coins are sometimes attributed to Ma Yin, but could be funerary items.

LATER SHU KINGDOM (926-65).
大蜀通宝 Da Shu tong bao (Great Shu currency).
Attributed to Meng Zhixiang when he became Emperor Gao Zu of Shu in Chengdu in 934. He died three months later. Despite its rarity, some say this coin continued to be cast by his son, Meng Chang, until 937.

广政通宝 Guang Zheng tong bao. Bronze and iron.
The bronze coins were cast by Meng Chang from the beginning of this period, 938. In 956 iron coins began to be cast to cover additional military expenses. They circulated until 963.

SOUTHERN TANG KINGDOM (937-75).
Emperor Yuan Zu (Li Jing). (943-61).
保大元宝 Bao Da yuan bao. Rev: Tian above. Iron. 943-57.
There is also an extremely rare bronze example of this coin.

永通泉货 Yong Tong Quan Huo.
In 959, Li Jing was short of funds for his army. His minister Zhong Mo obtained permission to cast large coins, one equal to ten, with this inscription. In 964, the coin was withdrawn when Zhong Mo incurred the displeasure of the Emperor.

唐国通宝 Tang Guo tong bao.
Seal, "li," and regular script. From 959.
大唐通宝 Da Tang tong bao. Li Script. From 959.

Emperor Li Yu (961-978).
开元通宝Kai Yuan tong bao.
Seal and "li" Script. From 961.

Distinguished from Tang period Kai Yuans by the broader rims, and the characters being in less deep relief.
In the second year of Qiande (961), Li Yu ascended the throne, and the resources of the country being exhausted, his minister Han Xizai obtained permission to cast coins. These were on the Kai Yuan model, but in seal writing devised by the scholar Xu Xuan. This coin was slightly larger than the old Kai Yuans, and had broader rims, and was found convenient by both the government and the people.

大齐通宝 Da Qi tong bao (Great Qi currency).
Said to have been cast in 937 by the Prince of Qi or by the founder of the Southern Tang with the original name of the Tang kingdom. Only two specimens were known, and these have now disappeared.

SOUTHERN HAN KINGDOM (905-71).
开平元宝 Kai Ping yuan bao. Lead.
Attributed to Liu Yin, the founder of the Southern Han Kingdom, who apparently cast it to commemorate this Liang dynasty period title (907-10). Excavated in Guangdong.

Emperor Lie Zu (Liu Yan) (917-42).
乾亨通宝 Qian Heng tong bao.
乾亨重宝 Qian Heng zhong bao. Bronze and lead.
In 917, Liu Yan proclaimed himself Emperor of a dynasty at first called the Great Yue, then the Han, and set up his capital at Canton, which he renamed Xingwangfu.

CRUDE LEAD COINS.
Attributed to the Southern Han/Chu area (900-971).
开元通宝 Kai Yuan tong bao. :Based on Tang Dynasty coins.:Local style. Numerous reverse inscriptions, apparently series numbers.There is a very great variety of such coins; some have crescents on the reverse. The "Kai" character sometimes looks like 永 "yong". Characters and legends often reversed because the incompetent workmen had not mastered the art of engraving in negative to make the moulds. Some specimens have meaningless characters.

Wu Wu, Wu Wu Wu, Wu Wu Wu Wu, Wu Zhu, Kai Yuan Wu Wu.
These coins are typical of the hybrid inscriptions formed by combinations of inappropriate characters. They also have series numbers on the reverse.
In 924 it was reported: In the shops and the markets, control of silk and money has resulted in the circulation of small lead coins which we readily find in great quantities; they all come from south of the [Yangtze] river whence the merchants transport them here surreptitiously. In 929, the Chu authorities fixed the value of a lead coin as 1/100 of a bronze coin. In 962 it was decreed that the lead coins should circulate in towns, and copper coins outside of them. Those contravening this risked the death penalty.
Nearly all the coin hoards of this period are of lead coins found in towns, eg the Guangfu Road, Guangzhou hoard of 2,000 coins.
It is clear that most of these coins were made unofficially by the merchants or the people.

YOU ZHOU AUTONOMOUS REGION. (900-14).
From 822, the You Zhou (modern Hebei) area enjoyed virtual independence from the rest of the empire. At the end of the ninth century the Regional Commandant of You Zhou was Liu Rengong, succeeded by his son Liu Shouguang from 911. The histories say that Liu Rengong minted iron coins. He is also said to have ordered his subordinates to collect up all [old?] bronze coins and bring them to Da An mountain where he buried them in a cave. When they had all been hidden away, he killed the workmen and covered over the entrance. The coins below have been found together in the north of China. Opinion on their attribution is divided. Although Yong An was a Xia dynasty period title, these coins appear to be the result of unregulated minting, which seems appropriate for the regime of the Liu family.
永安一十 Yong An Yi Shi.
永安一百 Yong An Yi Bai.
永安五百 Yong An Wu Bai.
永安一千 Yong An Yi Qian.
The above are found in bronze and iron.

五铢 Wu Zhu. Iron.
货布 Huo Bu. Rev:San Bai.
顺天元宝 Shun Tian yuan bao. Iron.
These poorly made coins are imitations of coins of previous regimes attributed to the You Zhou.

The Northern Song Dynasty

In 960, General Zhao Kuangyin had the throne thrust upon him by mutinous officers. He allowed the Later Zhou family to retire peacefully and established the Song Dynasty. Coins were the main basis of the Song monetary system. Cloth had reverted to the status of a commodity. Aided by the exploitation of new copper mines, cash were produced on a large scale. By the Yuanfeng period (1078-85), casting from 17 different mints produced over five million strings a year of bronze coins. Most mints produced 200,000 strings a year; the largest, Shao Zhou in Guangdong where there was a large copper mine, produced 800,000 strings. In 1019, the coinage alloy was set at copper 64%, lead 27%, tin 9%. This shows a reduction of nearly 20% in copper content compared with the Tang dynasty Kai Yuan coin.With so much official coinage available, private coining was generally not a serious problem. Song coins were used over much of Asia, especially in Korea, Japan, Annam, and Indonesia. Hoards of Song coins are often found in these countries.A wide variety of ordinary cash coin types was produced. The inscription was nearly always changed when the period title was changed. Seal, "li", regular, running, and "grass" styles of writing were all used at various times. Many inscriptions were written by the ruling Emperor, which has resulted in some of the most admired and analysed calligraphy to be found on cash coins. In addition, inscriptions could use 元宝 "yuan bao" or 通宝 "tong bao", increasing the number of variations possible. Large coins which used 重宝 "zhong bao" were also issued in a variety of sizes and nominal denominations, usually devalued soon after issue.A feature of Northern Song coinage is the sets of Matched Coins (对钱 "dui qian"). This means the simultaneous use of two or three different calligraphic styles on coins of the same period title which are otherwise identical in size of hole, width of rim, thickness, size and position of the characters and alloy. One can assume that these congruences arose from the workmanship of the different mints, but no attributions have yet been proposed.From the beginning of the dynasty, iron coins were extensively used in present day Sichuan and Shaanxi where copper was not readily available. Between 976 and 984, a total of 100,000 strings of iron coins was produced in Fujian as well.In 993, for paying the land tax one iron coin was equal to one bronze, for the salary of clerks and soldiers one bronze equalled five iron coins, but in trade ten iron coins were needed for one bronze coin. In 1005, four mints in Sichuan produced over 500,000 strings of iron coins a year. This declined to 210,000 strings by the beginning of the Qingli period (1041). At this time, the mints were ordered to cast 3 million strings of iron cash to meet military expenses in Shaanxi. However, by 1056, casting was down to 100,000 strings a year, and in 1059 minting was halted for 10 years in Jiazhou and Qiongzhou, leaving only Xingzhou producing 30,000 strings a year. During the Xining period (from 1068), minting was increased, and by the Yuanfeng period (from 1078) it was reported that there were nine iron coin mints, three in Sichuan and six in Shaanxi, producing over a million strings a year. Thereafter, output declined gradually.

EMPEROR TAI ZU (960-76).
宋元通宝 Song Yuan tong bao.
"Li" script.
Inscription based on the Kai Yuan coin. Nominal weight 1 "qian". Various dots and crescents are found on the reverse. First cast in 960, and then until the end of the reign.
Iron.
Casting of iron coins started at Baizhangxian, Yazhou, in Sichuan, from 970. Ten furnaces cast 9,000 strings a year.

EMPEROR TAI ZONG (976-97).
太平通宝 Tai Ping tong bao (976-989).
"Li" script.
Various dots and crescents are found on the reverse.
Iron coin.
These small iron coins come from Sichuan. 10 were equivalent to one bronze coin.
Large iron coin. Rev: Large dot above.
This coin was cast at Jianzhou, Fujian in 983, and was intended to be equivalent to 3 bronze coins.

No coins were issued with the Yong Xi and Duan Gong period titles (984-89).

淳化元宝 Chun Hua yuan bao (990-94).
Regular, running, and grass script bronze coins.
Small iron coins.
Large iron coin. Nominal value 10.
In 991, 20,000 iron coins were needed in the market for one roll of silk. Permission was requested to alter the casting to Value Ten coins in the Imperial Script pattern. In one year only 3,000 strings were cast. They were not considered convenient, so casting was stopped.

至道元宝 Zhi Dao yuan bao (995-97).
Regular, running, and grass script.
During this reign there was an increase in the number of mints in operation. The inscriptions were written by the Emperor himself, who was a noted scholar and calligrapher. The weight of 2,400 small coins was set at 15 "jin", so one weighed 1 "qian".

EMPEROR ZHEN ZONG (998-1022).
咸平元宝 Xian Ping yuan bao. Regular script. (998-1003).
Found in bronze and iron.

景德元宝 Jing De yuan bao. Regular script. (1004-07).
Bronze.
Iron, Value Two.
Iron, Value Ten.
The large iron coins were minted at Jiazhou and Qiongzhou in Sichuan in 1005. They weighed 4 "qian" each.

祥符通宝 Xiang Fu yuan bao. Regular script. (1008-16).
Bronze.
Iron. Medium size and large size.
The large iron coins were cast from 1014 to 1016 in Yizhou, Sichuan. Their nominal value was 10 cash and weight 3.2 "qian."Xiang Fu tong bao. Regular script. (1008-16).

天禧通宝 Tian Xi tong bao. Regular script. (1017-22). Bronze and iron.
At this time, there were copper coin mints at Yongping in Jiangxi, Yongfeng in Anhui, Kuangning in Fujian, Fengguo in Shanxi, and in the capital. There were also three iron coin mints in Sichuan.

No coins were produced with the Qian Xing period title, which only lasted one year, 1022.

EMPEROR REN ZONG (1022-63).
天圣元宝 Tian Sheng yuan bao. (1023-31).
Seal, regular, and "li" script.

明道元宝 Ming Dao yuan bao (1032-33).
Seal and regular script.
Iron coins.

景祐元宝 Jing You yuan bao. (1034-38).
Seal and regular script.
Small and large iron coins.

皇宋通宝 Huang Song tong bao (1039-54).
Seal script, regular script, and many variations.
Iron. Small characters.
The small character iron coins are associated with casting in Shaanxi and Shanxi in the Qing Li period (from 1044).
Iron. Large characters.
These with are associated with the Sichuan mints.

The histories say that the Huang Song coin was cast in Baoyuan 2 – 1039. As it is rather common, and there are no bronze small cash from the next three periods, it appears to have been issued for longer than one year.

康定元宝 Kang Ding yuan bao. (1040).
"Li" script.
Iron. Small size, medium size.

庆历重宝 Qing Li zhong bao. Regular script. (1041-48).
Large bronze coin.
Large iron coin.
The Qing Li large bronze coins, intended to be worth 10 cash, were cast in Jiangnan to fund the war with the Western Xia. Iron coins were cast in Shanxi and other prefectures. The large coins caused prices to leap up and both public and private interests suffered. In 1048, the large iron coins were devalued to 3 iron cash.

至和元宝 Zhi He yuan bao (1054-55).
Seal script, "li" script, regular script.
Zhi He tong bao (1054-55).
Seal script, "li" script, regular script.

嘉祐元宝 Jia You yuan bao (1056-63).
Seal script, "li" script, regular script.
Jia You tong bao (1056-63).
Seal script, "li" script, regular script.

References

* David Hartill. "CAST CHINESE COINS." Trafford Publishing 2005.
* The Daniel K.E. Ching Sale. June 2, 1991. Scott Semans, Seattle.
* "Fisher's Ding." An annotated version of the Ding Fubao catalogue prepared by George A. Fisher, Jr. Colorado, 1990.
* Richard Von Glahn. "Fountain of Fortune (Money and Monetary Policy in China 1000-1700)."California, 1996.
* Norman F. Gorny. "Northern Song Dynasty Cash Variety Guide." Volume 1 Fugo Senshu. USA, 2001.
* David Hartill. "Qing Cash" (Royal Numismatic Society Special Publication 37). London, 2003.
* Charles O. Hucker. "A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial China". California, 1985.
* Peng Xinwei. "A Monetary History of China" (Zhongguo Huobi Shi). Trans. Edward H. Kaplan. Western Washington University, 1994.
* F. Schjoth. "Chinese Currency". London, 1929.
* François Thierry. :"Monnaies chinoises"::I L'Antiquite preimperiale. Paris, 1997.:II Des Qin aux Cinq Dynasties. Paris, 2003.
* Tung Tso Pin. "Chronological Tables of Chinese History." Hong Kong, 1960.
* D.C. Twitchett. "Financial Administration under the T'ang Dynasty." Cambridge, 1970.
* Wang Yu-Chuan. "Early Chinese Coinage". New York, 1980.
* "Xinjiang Numismatics." Ed. Zhu Yuanjie et al. Hong Kong, 1991.
* 大泉图录 Da Quan Tulu (Register of Large Cash). 鲍康 Bao Kang. Peking, 1876.
* 古钱大辞典 Gu Qian Da Cidian (Encyclopaedia of Old Coins). 丁福保 Ding Fubao. Shanghai, 1936.
* 开元通宝系年考 Kai Yuan Tong Bao Xi Nian Hui Kao (Kai Yuan Tong Bao. A Chronological Classification). 杜维善 顾小坤 Dun Weishan & Gu Xiaokun. Shanghai, 1996.
* 两宋铁钱 Liang Song Tie Qian (Iron Coins of the Two Song Dynasties). 阎福善 Yan Fushan (et al eds). Peking, 2000.
* 清朝钱谱 Shincho Senpu. (Qing Dynasty Cash Register). Hanawa Shiro. Tokyo, 1968.
* 太平天国钱币 Taiping Tianguo Qianbi (Coins of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom). 马定祥 马傅德 Ma Dingxiang & Ma Fude. Shanghai, 1983.
* 咸丰泉汇 Xianfeng Quan Hui (A Collection of Xianfeng Coins). 马定祥 Ma Dingxiang. Shanghai, 1994.
* 中国古钱目录 Zhongguo Gu Qian Mulu (Catalogue of Old Chinese Coins). 华光普 Hua Guangpu. Hunan, 1998.
* 中国钱币大辞典 - 先秦编 Zhongguo Qianbi Da Cidian – Xian Qin Bian (Chinese Coin Encyclopaedia – Early Times to Qin). 李葆华 Li Paohua (ed.). Peking, 1995.

External links

* [http://www.coincoin.com/seXC1.htm Scott Semans - Several descriptions of sample currency pieces with photos]
* [http://www.hunterian.gla.ac.uk/education/asian_cultures/knife_money.shtml University of Glasgow - example of knife money]


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