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!
Western Han Dynasty,
Si Zhu Ban Liang
(Cross-Shaped Liang)
西漢
四銖半兩
(十字兩)
Item number: A2101
Year: 175-140 BC
Material: Bronze
Size: 23.8 x 23.5 x 0.9 mm
Weight: 2.7 g
Provenance: Da Chen Stamps and Coins Collection 2015
This coin is identified as the “Si Zhu Ban Liang,” which was likely first cast in the fifth year of the reign of Emperor Wen of the Western Han dynasty (175 BC) and remained in circulation until the first year of the reign of Emperor Wu (140 BC).
The coin lacks both outer and inner rims on its obverse and reverse. The protrusion on the upper left edge is an unfiled casting sprue, a remnant of the bronze flow channel from the casting process. The inscription on the obverse is in seal script and reads “ban liang” from right to left, with both characters detached from the rim and inner margin. The character “ban” is obscured due to corrosion. The character “liang” features two simplified strokes for the “ren” radicals on either side, with a horizontal stroke crossing the vertical stroke in the centre to form a cross, leading some scholars to refer to it as the “cross-shaped liang.” Coins with this characteristic have been unearthed in various locations including Zhenping, Yongcheng, Yiyang, Nanyang, and Xinzheng in Henan province.
The term “ban liang” originated during the Warring States period, when such coins originally weighed half a liang (approximately 7.81 grams today). By the late Qin dynasty, their weight had been reduced to eight zhu (approximately 5.21 grams). However, by then, the term “ban liang” no longer referred to either the denomination or actual weight, but instead to the standard form of the coin—round with a square hole in the centre. According to the “Treatise on Food and Money II” in the Book of Han, “In the fifth year of Emperor Xiaowen’s reign, as coins became increasingly numerous and lightweight, the government began recasting four-zhu coins, inscribed with ‘ban liang.’ The ban on private minting was lifted, and the people were permitted to cast coins.” The phrase “coins became increasingly numerous and lightweight” refers to the “elm-seed ban liang” coins of the early Han dynasty, also known as “seed coins,” which were light, thin, and featured large central holes. Although these coins bore the same “ban liang” inscription, their official weight was only three zhu, prompting public dissatisfaction with their lightness. Subsequently, Emperor Wen lifted the ban on coinage, allowing the people to cast “ban liang” coins modelled to weigh four zhu. Consequently, there exists a wide variety of stylistic versions of the Si Zhu Ban Liang, too numerous to enumerate. Nonetheless, due to effective regulation and oversight, the phenomenon of inferior coins driving out superior ones did not materialise. Coins attributed to Emperor Wen’s Si Zhu Ban Liang unearthed in archaeological contexts consistently weigh slightly more than the official standard of four zhu (approximately 2.6 grams). In 140 BC, the first year of the reign of Emperor Wu, the government introduced a new three-zhu coin. That same year, the coinage ban was reinstated, with the edict: “Those who illegally mint any type of metal coin shall be sentenced to death; violations by officials and civilians were too numerous to record.” After several policy reversals, the currency system was eventually unified under the five-zhu coin standard.
Emperor Wen of Han, personal name Liu Heng, was the fifth emperor of the Western Han dynasty and the fourth son of Emperor Gaozu, Liu Bang. He reigned from 179 BC to 157 BC. Upon ascending the throne, he continued the policies of his father Liu Bang, as well as those of his predecessors Emperor Hui and Empress Dowager Lü, adopting a governance style characterised by reduced taxes and corvée obligations, and a philosophy of “reposing the people through rest.” He is regarded as a key figure in the establishment of the “Rule of Wen and Jing.” During his reign, governance was marked by integrity and frugality. He took measures to curtail the power of aristocratic families, reformed the bureaucracy, and placed great emphasis on the fairness and application of law, even personally amending statutes to reduce the severity of punishments. Influenced by the Daoist Huang-Lao school of thought, he advocated for a policy of non-intervention, resulting in a well-stocked treasury, social stability, and improved livelihoods for the populace. He also implemented monetary reforms, such as issuing the “Si Zhu Ban Liang” coin to stabilise the currency system. Emperor Wen’s reign saw no large-scale military campaigns, allowing the state’s overall strength to gradually recover and laying a solid foundation for the subsequent territorial expansion under Emperor Wu. After his death, he was posthumously honoured with the temple name “Wen,” and together with his son Emperor Jing, is remembered as one of the most exemplary rulers of the early Chinese imperial era.