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Rare Large One Tael Silver Dragon Dollar KIRIN Province Emperor Guangxu 1884 Y10

Rare Large One Tael Silver Dragon Dollar KIRIN Province Emperor Guangxu 1884 Y10

One Tael Silver Silver Dragon Dollar

Emperor Guangxu CHINA

KIRIN Province Year 10, 1884




Authenticity guaranteed!

37.3 grams; Silver 900; size: 43.3 mm

Emperor Guangxu CHINA 1 Tael Silver Dragon Dollar

KIRIN province 1884

Obverse:

光绪十年

吉林机器

官局监制

 

Reverse:

厂平壹两

Edge: Reeded

 

Silver Dragon Dollar

Silver Dragon coins, also sometimes known as Dragon dollars, are silver coins issued by China, Japan and later Korea for general circulation in their own countries. Featuring a dragon on the obverse, all were inspired by the silver Spanish dollar which following its introduction into the region in the 16th Century had set the standard for a de facto common currency for trade in the Far East, this specification being a weight of 27.22 grams and a fineness of .900.

Chinese coins of this type are known Kwangtung dollars from the old romanisation of the name of the mint that they were first produced in China, more popularly they are known in Chinese as 龍銀, literally "Dragon Silver" or "Dragon Money", 銀 capable of being read as both silver or money.

Even before the official ending of the Qing dynasty factions and cliques emerged as would be warlords jostled for position and influence. As China headed into the republican and warlord eras, local warlords used the provincial mints to issue their own Silver Dragons, these are of variable quality and value depending on the greed and resources of the warlord in question. These warlord and pre-warlord era coins include high quality coins intended to promote the legitimacy and prestige of the warlord and his faction and are proudly marked as such; there are also low quality coins, the majority, intended to deceive the receiver into believing that they are earlier coins of higher silver content and value, though not fake-in so much that they came from semi-official sources-these were and are of variable value depending on their silver content. With the coming of the Chinese republic China would continue producing silver coins of the same specification updated to bear the image of Yuan Shikai and other politicians. China was forced from the silver standard in 1935, however even after the silver coins became demonetised they remained a highly prized means of preserving wealth in an era of inflation and war.

 

Following the establishment of the Spanish Philippines, Intramuros became an entrep?t for Chinese goods in one direction and silver, from across the Pacific to the Spanish held silver mines of Mexico, in the other. This so-called "Manila Galleons" trade route, led from the 16th Century onwards to the wide circulation and acceptance of "pieces of eight" in East Asia. Even after the end of the Spanish Empire in the Americas, Western nations wishing to trade with China found the preferred method of payment was the silver Mexican Peso, the successor of the Spanish dollar.

The high regard in which the Spanish-Mexican coins came to be held, led to the minting of silver Chinese yuan, Japanese yen and later Korean won coins to the same specifications as the Spanish ones i.e. a weight 7 mace and 2 candareens (approx. 27.22 grams or 420 grains) and a fineness of .900 (90%), for use as legal tender in their own countries. The name of these coins in all three countries derives from 圓, meaning round or circular object in all three languages, a link to these silver coins surviving in the modern names of the Chinese, Japanese and North and South Korean currencies, that is yuan, yen, and won.

 

 

 

 

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Registered mail shipping:

11.50 Euro within Europe, 16.50 Euro worldwide, Combined shipping accepted.

Rare Large One Tael Silver Dragon Dollar KIRIN Province Emperor Guangxu 1884 Y10

$600.00Price
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