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Ming Dynasty Zheng Family,
Yongli Tongbao
Nagasaki, Japan
(Seal Script Version)
明鄭 永曆通寶
日本長崎造
(篆書版)
Item number: A979
Year: AD 1651-1674
Material: Copper
Size: 27.9 x 27.9 x 1.0 mm
Weight: 5.15 g
Manufactured by: Nagasaki, Japan
Provenance:
1. Noonans 2022
2. D. L. F. Sealy Collection
This is a copper coin minted during the tumultuous period of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. It was commissioned by the Zheng family, who first established their base in Xiamen, Fujian, and later relocated to Taiwan. The coin was struck in Nagasaki, Japan, under the reign title of the Yongli Emperor of the Southern Ming, whom the Zheng family recognised as the legitimate ruler.
The coin has the typical square-holed design commonly seen in Chinese currency, but it is made of red copper,a material customarily used in Japan, which contrasts noticeably with the brass typically used in Chinese coinage. The obverse side of the coin features four Chinese characters, “Yongli Tongbao” (永曆通寶), inscribed in a distinctive seal script, arranged in the order of top, bottom, right, and left. The reverse side of the coin is blank, with no inscriptions or markings.
In AD 1647, Zheng Chenggong (also known as Koxinga), the son of the prominent Fujian maritime merchant Zheng Zhilong and his Japanese mother, rose to prominence in East Asia. Raised with the principles of Bushido and Neo-Confucianism, and honoured with the imperial surname by the Southern Ming’s Prince Tang, Koxinga was deeply influenced by a sense of loyalty and righteousness. The betrayal of his father, who chose to surrender, and the tragic death of his mother at the hands of Qing soldiers, who violated her, drove the 23-year-old Koxinga to vow to “Restore the Ming and overthrow the Qing.” He dedicated himself to the cause, while also expanding the international trade and smuggling network inherited from his father. In AD 1662, he successfully captured the Dutch stronghold in Taiwan, establishing a base to support his extensive military campaigns.
To finance his military campaigns, Koxinga commissioned the minting of Yongli Tongbao coins from the Nagasaki domain in Japan in AD 1651. These coins were produced in two script styles: seal script and running script.
In AD 1662, shortly after Koxinga’s successful conquest of Taiwan, he died due to the dual blows of receiving news of the Yongli Emperor’s death and his son Zheng Jing’s incest. Upon inheriting his father’s enterprise, Zheng Jing continued to use the Yongli era name of the Southern Ming dynasty, despite Westerners referring to his rule in Taiwan as the “Kingdom of Tungning.”
In AD 1666, as Qing forces captured Chinese coastal bases, Zheng Jing, retreating to Taiwan, once again commissioned coinage from Japan to support the island’s economic development. In AD 1674, invited by Geng Jinchong to join the Revolt of the Three Feudatories, Zheng Jing commissioned Japanese minting for the third time to fund military expenses. During his occupation of Fujian from AD 1675 to AD 1679, Zheng Jing also attempted small-scale minting operations in the region.
In AD 1681, after a failed counteroffensive, Zheng Jing, despondent and in poor health, returned to Taiwan and died at the age of 40. In AD 1683, Shi Lang, a former subordinate of Koxinga, led Qing forces to conquer Taiwan. Zheng Kezang, the last ruler of the Zheng family, surrendered with his troops and civilians, thus ending the Zheng family’s 21-year rule over Taiwan.