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Ming Dynasty
Yongle Tongbao
明 永樂通寶
Item number: A1086
Year: AD 1408-1424
Material: Bronze
Size: 23.8 x 24.1 x 1.1 mm
Weight: 3.6 g
Provenance:
1. Noonans 2022
2. D. L. F. Sealy Collection
This is a bronze coin minted during the reign of the third emperor of the Ming Dynasty, Emperor Yongle (Zhu Di), bearing the inscription “Yongle Tongbao,” which corresponds to his reign title. The coin features the typical square-holed design. On the obverse side, the four characters “Yongle Tongbao” are inscribed in regular script in the order of top, bottom, right, and left. The reverse side of the coin is plain, without any patterns or inscriptions.
Zhu Di was the fourth son of Zhu Yuanzhang, the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty. Zhu Yuanzhang conferred upon him the title of “Prince of Yan,” granting him control over the Beijing region to safeguard against Mongol invasions from the north. In AD 1398, following Zhu Yuanzhang’s death, Zhu Di’s nephew, the Jianwen Emperor, ascended the throne. Faced with the new emperor’s policy of diminishing the power of the regional princes, particularly those of his uncles, Zhu Di was provoked. In AD 1399, Zhu Di led his well-trained troops under the pretext of “clearing the emperor’s court of corrupt officials” and launched an attack on the Jianwen Emperor in Nanjing, an event historically known as the “Jingnan Rebellion.”
After seizing the throne, Zhu Di relocated the capital from Nanjing to Beijing and initiated a series of new reforms. In terms of fiscal policy, Zhu Di reversed his father Zhu Yuanzhang’s monetary policy, which had ceased the minting of copper coins and relied solely on paper currency since AD 1394.In the 6th year of the Yongle reign (AD 1408), Zhu Di officially resumed the minting of copper coins, known as “Yongle Tongbao.”
Additionally, after the Jingnan Rebellion, Zhu Di was unable to locate the whereabouts of the Jianwen Emperor, and rumours circulated that the deposed emperor had fled to the “Western Seas,” referring to the Southeast Asian region. To secure his throne, Zhu Di ordered his trusted eunuch Zheng He to lead a massive fleet on seven voyages. These expeditions not only covered Southeast Asia but also extended to India and the East African coast. Zheng He carried large quantities of Yongle Tongbao coins, which were used for trade with local merchants. As a result, significant numbers of Yongle Tongbao coins have been discovered in archaeological excavations in the South China Sea and as far away as East Africa, serving as evidence of the Ming Dynasty’s extensive foreign relations.
In East Asia, where Chinese culture had a profound influence, surrounding regions such as Annam (Vietnam), Ryukyu (Okinawa), and Japan all recorded the imitation minting of Yongle Tongbao coins. This practise was particularly prominent in Japan during the Sengoku period, where the warlord Oda Nobunaga even incorporated the imagery of the Yongle Tongbao into the banners of his forces.