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,
Xuantong Yuanbao,1 Mace & 4.4 Candareens
Manchurian Provinces
(High Plum Blossom Version)
清 宣統元寶
庫平一錢四分四釐
東三省造
(偏高梅花版)
Item number: A1631
Year: AD 1912-1928
Material: Silver
Size: 23.5 x 23.5 x 1.3 mm
Weight: 5.05 g
Manufactured by: Fengtian, Eastern Three Provinces Mint
Provenance: Da Chen Stamps and Coins Collection 2014
This is a Xuantong Yuanbao silver coin with a denomination of 1 Mace and 4.4 Candareens, minted after the Xinhai Revolution at the Eastern Three Provinces Mint in Fengtian. It was struck using modified old dies with the Manchu script removed.
The obverse of the coin features an outer beaded circle, with a central depiction of a five-clawed dragon emitting a fireball from its mouth. On either side of the coiled dragon, an eight-petalled flower serves as a separator. The upper edge bears the English inscription of the region, “MANCHURIAN PROVINCES,” while the lower edge displays the denomination, “1 MACE AND 44 CANDAREENS.”
The reverse side of the coin features two beaded circles. The innermost circle surrounds a plum blossom motif, encircled by the Chinese inscription “Xuantong Yuanbao.” The plum blossom is slightly shifted upward from the centre. The upper edge is inscribed with the mint name “Mint of the Three Eastern Provinces,” and the lower edge indicates the denomination “Kuping 1 Mace & 4.4 Candareens.”
In the 33rd year of the Guangxu reign (AD 1907), the Qing dynasty reorganised Manchuria, the land of its ancestral origins, into three provinces: Fengtian, Jilin, and Heilongjiang. Concurrently, the Qing government established the position of Viceroy of the Three Eastern Provinces to oversee these areas, appointing Hsu Shih-chang, a trusted associate of Yuan Shikai, as the first viceroy.
Hsu Shih-chang’s appointment as a Han Chinese to this significant position in the homeland of the Manchus reflects the shifting balance of power between Han Chinese and Manchus in the late Qing bureaucracy. At the same time as the provincial reorganisation, the long-established Fengtian Mint was renamed the “Mint of the Three Eastern Provinces,” continuing its role in supplying the region with currency.
In AD 1911, following the Xinhai Revolution that overthrew the Qing dynasty, the mint continued to produce the Xuantong Yuanbao coins with a denomination of 1 Mace & 4.4 Candareens to meet the market demand for small-denomination currency.
However, after the establishment of the Republic of China, these coins were modified to remove the Manchu and English references to the Xuantong emperor, resulting in various new designs. Production and circulation of the Xuantong Yuanbao continued under the control of the Fengtian warlords until AD 1928, just before Zhang Xueliang’s announcement of the “Northeast Flag Replacement,” signalling the region’s allegiance shift to the Nationalist government.