Republic of China Sichuan Province Silver Dollar 10 Cents 1st year of the Republic (1912)
Republic of China
Sichuan Province Silver Dollar 10 Cents 1st year of the Republic (1912) Weight: 2.66 grams, Size: 18.7 mm; Material: Silver Sichuan Province Silver Dollar, 1st year of the Republic (1912) 1 (1912) 年元國民華中 角一 CHINA. Szechuan. Silver Dollar 10 Cents, Year 1 (1912). 中華民國元年 軍政府造 四川银幣 The Obverse bears six Chinese characters on the top, means this coin was minted in Szechuan Province in 1912 or the first year of the Republic of China, and a Chinese ideogram "Han" in center meaning that the Chinese have taken the place of the Manchu Government, within a linear circle. Outside are 18 circles representing 18 Provinces of China. The reverse bears a flowery ornament in center, surrounded by four Chinese characters meaning "The Silver Coin of Szechuen" within the beaded circle and two asterisks on the both side. The four Chinese characters on the top means "Made by the Military Government" and the value below the circle. The inscriptions of this silver coin are almost the same as the above one except the coin value is 5 cents. They are all minted as the Szechuan Tahan Military Government was founded after the success of the 1911 Revolution. Szechuan (Sichuan) Province is in the south central part of China, and is an important economic power in the country. The capital is Chengdu. In the early 20th Century it, along with Tibet, was made a special administrative disctrict, acknowledging the dominance of non-Han Chinese people in the region. The Szechuan mint with modern equipment opened in 1898 with machinery brought from New Jersey, USA. Another mint was opened in Chungking in 1905. THE EARLY REPUBLIC In the first year of the Republic, several provinces, among them Sichuan (Szechuan), Yunnan, Fujian (Fukien) and Hunan, minted coins independently, with their own designs.
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