Coin Qianyuan zhongbao

Coin Qianyuan zhongbao

CC BY-SA 4.0

Coin Qianyuan zhongbao

CC BY-SA 4.0

CC BY-SA 4.0 europeana.eu

A round copper alloy coin with a square hole in the centre, called fangkong qian 方孔錢. These appeared in various denominations, mostly as tongbao 通寶 (“common currency”) coins, which were worth one monetary unit, yuanbao 元寶 (“original currency”) and zhongbao 重寶 (“heavy currency”), which had higher denominations. In many varieties and denominations, such coins had been in circulation as standard money since the time of Emperor Gaozu 高祖 (reigned 618–626), the first emperor of the Tang Dynasty (618–907). In 621, he introduced a new coinage standard with the issue of the Kaiyuan tongbao 開元通寶 coin. Its name could be translated as “money in circulation at the beginning of a new era” because kai 開 (open, begin) and yuan 元 (new, first, original), read vertically from top to bottom, mean “opening a new era”, while tong 通 (circulate, ... more

A round copper alloy coin with a square hole in the centre, called fangkong qian 方孔錢. These appeared in various denominations, mostly as tongbao 通寶 (“common currency”) coins, which were worth one monetary unit, yuanbao 元寶 (“original currency”) and zhongbao 重寶 (“heavy currency”), which had higher denominations. In many varieties and denominations, such coins had been in circulation as standard money since the time of Emperor Gaozu 高祖 (reigned 618–626), the first emperor of the Tang Dynasty (618–907). In 621, he introduced a new coinage standard with the issue of the Kaiyuan tongbao 開元通寶 coin. Its name could be translated as “money in circulation at the beginning of a new era” because kai 開 (open, begin) and yuan 元 (new, first, original), read vertically from top to bottom, mean “opening a new era”, while tong 通 (circulate, be uniform, general, or universal), and bao 寶 (wealth, money), read from right to left, is the “currency in circulation” or simply the coin currently valid. On coins of later periods, the characters yuan 元 (origin, base) and zhong 重 (weight), denoting the main coin values, often replaced the character tong. Kaiyuan tongbaoQianyuan zhongbao 乾元重寶. In their time, these coins, issued by Emperor Suzong 肅宗 (reigned 756–762) had a face value of at least ten monetary units. With them, it was easier to pay the army that fought against the dynastic rebels in a large-scale revolt that broke out in 755 under the leadership of commander An Lushan 安禄山 (c. 703–757), and which was finally suppressed only in 763. The coins bear the name of the Qianyuan 乾元 (“heavenly beginning”) period in the reign of Emperor Suzong. (MG)

Material description: copper alloy
Manufacturing technique: copper alloy casting
Dimensions: radius: 22 mm
Inscription: 開元通寶 Qianyuan zhongbao (heavy currency in circulation during the era of "heavenly beginning")
No. of parts: 1
Current owner: Slovene Ethnographic Museum
Date of the last acquisition: 1963
Previous owners and periods of ownership: Ivan Skušek, Jr. and Tsuneko Kondō Kawase - Marija Skušek, National Museum of Slovenia, Slovene Ethnographic Museum
Object condition, handling and damage: relatively well preserved

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