跳至內容

File:Kai Yuan Tong Bao - Dr. Luke Roberts.jpg

頁面內容不支援其他語言。
這個檔案來自維基共享資源
維基百科,自由的百科全書

Kai_Yuan_Tong_Bao_-_Dr._Luke_Roberts.jpg (150 × 152 像素,檔案大小:61 KB,MIME 類型:image/jpeg


摘要

描述
English: East Asian Cash Coins

This page is just for fun. It links one of my hobbies, collecting Asian (primarily Japanese) cash coins and charms, with a historical perspective. I will introduce here aspects of how the coins were made, circulated, and what they can tell us about the societies that made them. I will be building the site slowly over the next few years. (9/26/01) (last updated 10/24/03)

What are East Asian Cash Coins? Cash coins were the "pennies" of East Asia, the most common daily currency. Typically, Asian cash coins are round copper alloy coins with a square hole in the center and writing with four Chinese characters on the front. They are cast in molds rather than stamped with dies and so are unlike the coins of the West Asian and European tradition. Round copper alloy coins with a hole in the center were first created by the Zhou dynasty in present day China in the 6th century B.C. Initially the inscriptions stated the value of the coin. The T'ang began a new tradition in 621 by making the inscription read Kai Yuan Tong Bao (image above, twice normal size) which was a reference to the beginning of the dynasty rather than to the value of the coin itself. After this most coins had dynastic or calendric era name inscriptions on the front. This basic design was adopted by many dynasties and countries throughout East Asia, which existed within the boundaries of present day Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Mongolia, and of course China. The design was standard over the region, as was the value--one wen in Chinese (mon in Japanese. Sometimes this value is described in English as one cash.)-- and these coins circulated relatively freely within the East Asian international economy. Officially, a thousand wen made up a guan (kan in Japanese), although local variations of this rate existed. The hole in the middle of the coin had a practical use. Money was often carried on strings rather than in purses. Frequently these strings were tied in units of 100, 300, or a thousand (the latter equalling one guan) like a roll of coins, to make counting easy. The reverse of the coins are usually blank, although many have inscriptions or ciphers identifying such things as the mint of manufacture, the year of manufacture, or--on larger sized coins-- the denomination. Coins with values of 2, 3, 4, 5, 10 and even on up to 100 or 200 wen exist. A thousand thanks to people who have already made suggestions to improve these pages. Most especially I would like to thank a coin mailing list in Japan filled with friendly people who have helped correct some errors. If you can read Japanese and your computer has Japanese fonts, the superb coin page of one of their members, Adachi Noboru, is http://park12.wakwak.com/~kosenkan/. This page is the completest and best organized page for cash coins which I have found. One of the best English language pages I know of is Vladimir Belyaev's page at http://www.charm.ru/, and he has many good links on it. Also, if you can read Japanese, the web page with the best list of links to all kinds of coin pages in Japanese and all languages is Iida Kazuo's at http://www.aa.aeonnet.ne.jp/~k.iida/kazuo/coin/coinlink.html

Chinese Coins The people who lived in the land of present day China made cash coins for more than two thousand years. I think that calligraphically the most beautiful and technically the most sophisticated coins came from the Northern Song dynasty. Even the coins made of iron reveal most extraordinary craftsmanship. China has frequently been part of foreign empires, such as the Mongol, the Jin, the Liao and the Manchu who set their ruling centers in China and both contributed to and were greatly influenced by Han Chinese culture. These dynasties cast coins with legends in their own languages and scripts as well as in the Chinese language. Some of these coins are quite beautiful as well. China is today and has always been a large multi-ethnic realm. This new arrangement is my first major revision since first creating a China page in 2001. I have divided the Chinese coins into pages devoted to different dynasties. It will take me a long time to scan coins and add them to each page. My collection is very spotty and focuses on the more common coins. Below are links to the various dynasty pages with a representative coin from the dynasty. At the bottom of each coin description I have put in the Chinese characters (using Japanese code because I cannot read Chinese as such). Set the viewer to recognize Japanese encoding. If your computer does not support Japanese this will come out in gibberish but don't worry, it is not necessary origins through Sui (581-618)

Tang (618-907) and Ten States etc. (circa 900-circa 970's)

Northern Song (960-1127) Part 1 960-1067 Part 2 1068-1127

Southern Song (1127-1229)

Liao(916-1125), Western Xia(1038-1227), Jin (1115-1234), Yuan (1271-1368)   Ming (1368-1644)

Qing (1644-1911)
日期
來源 Chinese Coins (University of California at Santa Barbara).
作者 Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts

授權條款

This file comes from the collection of Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts and is copyrighted.
Note: This permission only extends to the texts and photos of coins which are in the public domain at this link and its subpages, with the exception of the page The Manufacture of Cash Coins. It does not include any other content from www.history.ucsb.edu.
© 本檔案的著作權持有者,Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts,在註明所有人姓名的前提下,允許任何人使用本檔案於任何用途。包含再散布、衍生作品、商業用途及其他用途。
姓名標示:
Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts, available from http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/roberts/coins/index.html.

VRT Wikimedia

本作品為自由作品,可以讓任何人以任何目的使用本作品。如果您希望使用本內容,只要遵循本頁面所提到的任何著作權要求即可,而不需要請求許可。

維基媒體收到了一封電子郵件,確認著作權持有者已根據本頁面上所述的條款釋出。此郵件由一位VRT志工審查並儲存在我們的許可檔案中,獲得授權的志工可以 在工單編號#2018032110011865查看該郵件。

如果您對於該存檔郵件有疑問,請使用VRT公告板 工單連結: https://ticket.wikimedia.org/otrs/index.pl?Action=AgentTicketZoom&TicketNumber=2018032110011865
查找來自同一工單之其他檔案: SDC query (SPARQL)

說明

添加單行說明來描述出檔案所代表的內容

在此檔案描寫的項目

描繪內容

著作權狀態 繁體中文 (已轉換拼寫)

有著作權 繁體中文 (已轉換拼寫)

僅需姓名標示授權條款 繁體中文 (已轉換拼寫)

維基媒體VRTS工單號碼 繁體中文 (已轉換拼寫)

62,667 位元組

152 像素

150 像素

多媒體型式 繁體中文 (已轉換拼寫)

image/jpeg

校驗和 繁體中文 (已轉換拼寫)

5c02dab1ad03c9b5b8cc64ab89682dab4fd37bf0

斷定方法:​SHA-1 中文 (已轉換拼寫)

檔案歷史

點選日期/時間以檢視該時間的檔案版本。

日期/時間縮⁠圖尺寸用戶備⁠註
目前2018年5月21日 (一) 00:02於 2018年5月21日 (一) 00:02 版本的縮圖150 × 152(61 KB)Donald TrungUser created page with UploadWizard

超過 100 個頁面有用到此檔案。 下列清單只列出前 100 筆有用到此檔案的頁面。 您也可以檢視完整清單

檢視連結到這個檔案的更多連結

全域檔案使用狀況

以下其他 wiki 使用了這個檔案:

詮釋資料