Manufactured by: Kiang-nan Mint Bureau Silver Dollar Bureau, Nanjing
Provenance: Stack’s Bowers 2024
This is a Guangxu Yuanbao coin minted in the 27th year of the Guangxu Emperor’s reign (AD 1901) by the “Kiang-nan Mint Bureau” in Nanjing.Its denomination is stated as Kuping 7 Mace 2 Candareens. On the obverse side is a five-clawed coiled dragon exhaling a fireball, with six-petalled flowers on both sides serving as boundaries. The English inscription “KIANG NAN PROVINCE” is engraved along the upper edge, while the denomination “7 MACE AND 2 CANDAREENS” is depicted along the lower edge. Although the Qing government abolished Kiangnan Province as early as the 29th year of the Qianlong Emperor’s reign (AD 1764), dividing it into Anhui and Jiangsu provinces, the name persisted and continued to be used to refer to Nanjing until the end of the Qing Dynasty.
On the reverse side, there is a beaded border, within which the characters “Guangxu Yuanbao” are engraved in both Chinese and Manchu scripts. On the outer periphery, the left and right sides are divided by the production year in the sexagenary cycle, “Xin Chou.” Along the upper edge is the abbreviated name “HAH” of the foreign inspector “H. A. Holmes,” along with the inscription “Made in Jiangnan Province.” The denomination “Kuping 7 Mace 2 Candareens” is depicted along the lower edge. If one carefully examines the top right corner of the coin, they can discern assay marks denoting the purity of silver left by different murchants, represented by sun and dot patterns.
This coin is embedded in a silver dish crafted by the renowned Shanghai silversmith Zee Sung, with the manufacturing period estimated to fall roughly between AD 1927 and AD 1932.
The milling method in Nanjing began in the 22nd year of the Guangxu Emperor’s reign (AD 1896) under the approval of Liu Kunyi, the Governor-General of Liangjiang, who petitioned the court for permission. The following year, the mint was successfully established and put into operation, with machinery and dies imported from the renowned Birmingham Mint in the United Kingdom. Despite hiring foreign experts to supervise the manufacturing process, the silver coins produced in Nanjing were still of inconsistent quality and had lower silver content, making it difficult to compete with copper coins and Mexican silver dollars in the market.
In the 26th year of the Guangxu Emperor’s reign (AD 1900), despite the mint benefiting from the capture of Tianjin by the Eight-Nation Alliance, which led to a demand for silver coins in Nanjing untouched by the war, the departure of the British inspector Wharton forced the mint to close. It wasn’t until the following year, in AD 1901, during the Xin Chou year, that the factory resumed operations with the arrival of the newly appointed inspector H. A. Holmes, whose initials “HAH” were stamped on the coins as a mark of quality assurance.
According to records, a total of 2,377,710 Guangxu Yuanbao coins with a denomination of 7 Mace 2 Candareens were minted during the Xin Chou year. The unique “HAH” mark continued to be used in Nanjing until the 30th year of the Guangxu Emperor’s reign (AD 1904), after which other English letters were adopted as the mark.
物件編號: A292
年代: 公元 1901 年
材質: 銀
製造地: 江南鑄造銀元制錢總局,南京
來源: SBP錢幣拍賣 2024
這是一枚光緒27年(公元1901年),由南京「江南鑄造銀元制錢總局」鑄造的光緒元寶,其面額為庫平七錢二分。錢幣正面是一隻吐息火球的五爪蟠龍,左右兩側以六瓣花為分界,上緣以英文鐫刻「江南省」(KIANG NAN PROVINCE),下緣則是幣值「七錢二分」(7 MACE AND 2 CANDAREENS)。清廷早在乾隆29年(公元1764年)便已裁撤江南省,將其拆分為安徽和江蘇兩省,但該地名仍為沿襲指稱南京直至清末為止。
錢幣背面有一道珠圈,內部為漢滿兩文鐫刻的「光緒元寶」四字。外圍的左右兩側以出廠的干支年份「辛丑」為分界,上緣是工廠外籍化驗員「霍教習」(H. A. Holmes)的姓名縮寫「HAH」和鑄造地點「江南省造」字樣,下緣則是幣值「庫平七錢二分」。若仔細觀察錢幣的右上角,能發現不同錢莊留下的太陽和圓點圖案的銀純度戳記。