CHINA 1909-10 AD) XUAN TONG TONG BAO Board of Revenue mint

$25.00

CHINA, QING Dynasty, 1644-1911 AD, 1 cash, no date (1909-10 AD), Board of Revenue mint, west branch, Obverse: XUAN TONG TONG BAO, 1-dot TONG, Reverse: BOO CHIOWAN left-right, brass, 19mm, 2.29g, H22.1513, C1-19.1, aVF

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Description

Puyi became the last Qing Emperor at the age of 2. Forced to abdicate by the new Republican government in 1912, he was allowed to keep his money and his Forbidden Palace and had several decades of fun. He dabbled incompetently in policitics and was made puppet Emperor of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo. The Communists kept him as a propaganda whipping boy and allowed him to end his days as a gardiner.

A rebel took Beijing and the last Ming Emperor committed suicide. A Ming loyalist general invited the Manchus into China to aid the Ming heir but instead they proceeded to conquer the country in what some think produced more casualties than any previous war. The Qing Dynasty promoted culture and the economy flourished until the Europeans arrived with their Industrial Revolution and opium.

The oldest Chinese coins are at least as old as the earliest Greek coins. The Chinese coinage system differed from other systems in two ways. It was monometallic, only bronze coins circulated in general commerce. Gold and silver were treated as commodities. And the manufacturing method was by casting in moulds rather than by striking heated solid planchets. The main reference I use in attributing and describing these coins is the book: Chinese Cast Coins, by David Hartill.