Dosiye:Cast Chinese coins (330 B.C. - 1912 A.D.).jpg

Dosiye nyirizina (3.840 × 2.160 pixels, file size: 2,47 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Iyi dosiye iva kuri Wikimedia Commons kandi ishobora gukoreshwa muyindi mishinga. Ubusobanuro kuri urupapuro rusobanura dosiye zayo zerekanwa aha hakurikira.

Incamake

Umwirondoro
English: Kingdom of Yān (11th century B.C. – 222 B.C.) 🎑


1) An Yī Huà (一化) coin produced by the Kingdom of Yān between 300 B.C. and 220 B.C. to circulate alongside Knife Money🔪. This coin actually predates the Chinese Empire.
Han Dynasty (206 B.C. – 220 A.D.) 🀄
漢朝
2) A Bàn Liǎng (半兩) from the Han Dynasty, these were earlier minted by the Kingdom of Qin, and later by the Empire of Qin. Han Dynasty Bàn Liǎng coins generally tend to be diminutive compared to Qin era Bàn Liǎng coins. The inscription “Bàn Liǎng” means ½ Tael, though at the time of the Han Dynasty these coins were minted at varying weights. In 119 B.C. these were replaced by the Sān Zhū (三銖) coins.
3) An Wǔ Zhū (五銖) coin, these replaced the Sān Zhū (三銖) coins in 118 B.C. Wǔ Zhū coins continued to be produced by varying countries for the next 700 years. 🕯
Xin Dynasty (9 - 23) 😵💴😵
新朝
4) A Huò Quán (貨泉) coin issued by Wáng Mǎng (王莽), these coins were introduced alongside a chaotic system of round coins, cowrie shells 🐚, turtle shells 🐢, knife money 🔪, and spade money. As the people preferred this coin it would be continued to be made even after the fall of the Xin Dynasty with a mould from the year 50 (fifty) being found.
Tang Dynasty (618 – 690 ; 705 – 907) 📚
唐朝
5) a Kāi-Yuán Tōng-Bǎo (開元通寶) coin, fist issued in August 621 under the reign of Emperor Gāozǔ (高祖), these coins would be produced for around 300 years during most of the Tang Dynasty. 🏮
Song Dynasty (960 – 1279) 🎖
宋朝
6) A Dà Guān Tōng Bǎo (大觀通寶) coin from the (Northern-)Song Dynasty cast under the reign of Emperor Huīzōng (徽宗) from 1107 until 1110. The inscription is written in what David Hartill describes as "Slender-gold script", and it is said that the inscription was stylised by the Emperor himself. ✍🏻🤴🏻 A Dà Guān Tōng Bǎo coin appears as the cover of David Hartill’s 2005 classic “Cast Chinese coins”. 📖
Mongol Empire (1206 – 1368) / Yuan Dynasty (1271 – 1368) 🏇🏻
元朝 / ᠶᠡᠬᠡ ᠦᠨ ᠤᠯᠤᠰ / Их Юань Улс
7) A Mongol Zhì-Dà Tōng-Bǎo (至大通寶) coin cast under the reign of Külüg Khan (武宗) from 1307 until 1311, under the Mongol Empire paper banknotes would become a more common medium of exchange than metallic currencies. 💸
Ming Dynasty (1368 – 1644) 🌞
明朝
8 A Yǒng-Lè Tōng-Bǎo (永樂通寶) cash coin cast under the Yǒng-Lè Emperor (永樂帝), these were cast in great quantities for export to neighbouring countries like Japan (the Ashikaga Shogunate), and the Ryūkyū Kingdom, as well as further countries like the Majapahit Empire (an island realm ruled from Java) where these coins are still commonly dug up today (as of 2017). Domestically the Chinese preferred to use paper money (left over from Mongol rule) and in the preceding years copper coinage had remained a rarity on the domestic market.
Qing Dynasty (1644 – 1912) 👲🏻
清朝 / ᡩᠠᡳᠴᡳᠩ ᡤᡠᡵᡠᠨ
9) A Manchu Qián-Lóng Tōng-Bǎo (乾隆通寶) 1 wén coin produced under the Qián Lóng Emperor (乾隆帝), despite reigning from 1735 until 1796 these coins continued to be cast in Xinjiang (East-Turkestan) until the Wuchang Uprising & Xinhai Revolution restored Chinese independence in 1912.
Republic of China* (1912 – Present) 🌇
中華民國 / 臺灣 / 台灣
10) A Mín-Guó Tōng-Bǎo (民國通寶) cash coin of 1 wén produced in Dongchuan, Yunnan. These were among the last series of cash coins to be cast in China being cast in the denominations of 1 wén, and 10 wén (當十). The Province of Fujian also produced cash coins during the early Republican era but these would later be succeeded by machine-struck non-holed coins. 🔚

  • = Commonly referred to as “Taiwan” from 1971 as the Nanjing regime moved to Taibei in 1949, and became the “Taipei regime”. (as of 2017 the Republic of China still exists, please look at the upload date if this is no longer the case.) 🚤


Uploaded from my Microsoft Lumia 950 XL with Microsoft Windows 10 Mobile 📱.
Itariki
Inkomoko Own work
Umwanditsi Donald Trung Quoc Don (Chữ Hán: 徵國單) - Wikimedia Commons
Camera location53° 08′ 07,88″ N, 7° 01′ 44,75″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

Uruhushya

I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license:
w:en:Creative Commons
umurimo imigabane isa
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
Ufite umudendezo:
  • gusangiza – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to remix – gutangira ibikorwa
Hakurikijwe amabwiriza akurikira:
  • umurimo – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
  • imigabane isa – If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same or compatible license as the original.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts Icyongereza

copyright status Icyongereza

copyrighted Icyongereza

inception Icyongereza

13 Nzeri 2017

53°8'7.883"N, 7°1'44.753"E

media type Icyongereza

image/jpeg

checksum Icyongereza

e6d55599eba434d96b4c420d143f6b421f03c1bf

data size Icyongereza

2593760 byte

height Icyongereza

2160 pixel

width Icyongereza

3840 pixel

Amateka ya dosiye

Kanda kwitariki/n'isaha kugirango ufungure dosiye nkuko yagaragaye cyagihe.

Itariki/IsahaIfoto ntoyaIbipimoUmukoreshaIgitekerezo
muri iki gihe07:34, 22 Nzeri 2017Ifoto ntoya yikiciro nka 07:34, 22 Nzeri 20173.840 × 2.160 (2,47 MB)Donald TrungUser created page with UploadWizard

There are no pages that use this file.

Ikoreshwa rya dosiye rusange

Izindi wiki zikurikira zikoresha iyi dosiye:

View more global usage of this file.

Metadata