Digital museum showcasing the collection of worldwide legends over the years! 千古不朽博物館展示多年來收藏的世界傳奇故事!
Qing Dynasty,
Guangxu Yuanbao,
10 Cash, Kiang-Nan Province
(Yǐ Sì &Six-Petalled Flower Version)
清 光緒元寶
十文 江南省造
(乙巳&六瓣花版)
Item number: A438
Year: AD 1905
Material: Copper
Size: 28.7 x 28.7 x 1.5 mm
Weight: 7.35 g
Manufactured by: Kiang-nan Mint Bureau Silver Dollar Bureau, Nanjing
Provenance:
1. Noonans 2022
2. D. L. F. Sealy Collection
This is a copper coin of ten cash, produced in the 31st year of the Guangxu reign (AD 1905) by the “Kiang-nan Mint Bureau Silver Dollar Bureau” located in Nanjing. The coin follows the Western style and is inscribed with “Guangxu Yuanbao.”
The obverse of the coin features a water dragon emerging from the water with a fireball in its mouth. On either side of the dragon, Manchu script characters “Bao Ning” is engraved as separators. The upper edge bears the English inscription “KIANG-NAN,” while the lower edge indicates the denomination “TEN CASH.”
Kiangnan Province, with Nanjing as its capital, was an old administrative region from the early Qing Dynasty. Although it was divided into Jiangsu and Anhui provinces during the Qianlong period, the term “Kiangnan” continued to be used through the late Qing and early Republican eras.
The reverse of the coin features a beaded circle enclosing four Chinese characters, “Guangxu Yuanbao,” with a six-petalled flower design in the centre. On either side of the coin, the minting year “Yǐ Sì” is engraved. The upper edge bears the inscription “Minted in Kiangnan Province,” while the lower edge indicates the denomination “Ten Cash.”
During the Yǐ Sì year, copper coins produced in Kiangnan Province featured four different combinations based on the pairing of obverse and reverse dies: “flying dragon/water dragon” and “Manchu script/flower design.” Furthermore, the flying dragon motif can be further subdivided into two versions based on the flame details on the tail: “seven flames” and “eight flames.”
In the 27th year of Guangxu (AD 1901), Jiangsu Province, with Nanjing as its capital, began minting machine-struck copper coins, following Guangdong’s example. Starting the following year, the copper coins minted in Nanjing, marked “Kiangnan Province,” featured cyclical dating, which became a distinctive characteristic.
However, by the 32nd year of Guangxu (AD 1906), the oversupply of machine-struck copper coins led to a price decline. To control the economy and reclaim the right to mint coins, the Qing court ordered the cessation of copper coin minting across all provinces. Despite this, the regional governors, whose power had significantly increased since the Boxer Rebellion, were reluctant to relinquish the profits from minting. Consequently, the court’s ban was only partially effective, leading to a loss of public trust in copper coins and rendering them less effective in achieving their intended economic function.