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Nguyen Dynasty
Fine Silver 1 Taels Bar,
Emperor Gia Long
阮朝
嘉隆帝
精銀壹兩銀條
Item number: A1292
Year: AD 1802-1820
Material: Silver
Size: 43.1 x 13.4 x 6.4 mm
Weight: 38.35 g
Provenance: Teutoburger Münzauktion GmbH 2023
In the realm of silver coinage, Vietnam once minted a distinctive regional currency known as “bar money”. Prior to the French invasion in the 19th century, this type of silver bar held significant importance as a local currency, even serving as a currency for the royal treasury. Through trading, it found its way into Southeast Asia, China, Japan, and other regions.
This silver bar was minted during the reign of Emperor Gia Long, the founding ruler of the Nguyen Dynasty. The obverse side bears the inscription “精銀壹兩” (“One Tael of Fine Silver”) to indicate its weight, while the reverse shows the production date as “嘉隆年造” (“Minted in the Gia Long Era”).
The bar’s sides are heavily worn; on one side, a faint inscription likely shows the exchange rate with copper coins, reading “Value of 2.8 strings,” though the last character is unclear. The opposite side has only the first two characters, “中平” (“Zhong Ping”), legible, with the remaining characters too worn to identify. The top of the bar also has two marks—a double solid circle and a square hole—presumably stamps from different merchants marking its circulation.
Emperor Gia Long rose to power in the late 18th century, a period when Vietnam was fragmented, with competing factions and regions vying for control. Using the southern regions as his base, Gia Long actively engaged in diplomatic and military alliances with external powers such as Siam and France. In AD 1802, he successfully unified Vietnam and established the Nguyen Dynasty. The following year, the Jiaqing Emperor of China formally recognised his rule, granting legitimacy to his authority.