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ROC,
Double Flags Coin
Ten-Cash Copper Coin,
Hunan Province
(Clerical Script Tong, Without Upper Dots, Long Outer crease, Reverse With Auspicious Grain,Thin Leaf, 19 coils Version)
民國
雙旗幣
當十銅元
湖南省造
(隸銅無點長外線背嘉禾細葉19繞版)
Item number: A2688
Year: AD 1912-1925
Material: Copper
Size: 28.1 x 28.1 x 1.3 mm
Weight: 6.35 g
Manufactured by: Hunan Mint, Changsha
Provenance: Da Chen Stamps and Coins Collection 2014
This is a ten-cash copper coin minted by the Hunan Mint between AD 1912 and 1925.
On the obverse, the central design features two crossed flags. The flag on the right is the Five-Coloured Flag used during the Beiyang Government period, symbolising the unity of the five major ethnic groups. The flag on the left is the Nineteen-Star Flag, which served at the time as the standard of the Army and Air Force. It was a revision of the Iron-Blood Eighteen-Star Flag adopted after the Wuchang Uprising to represent the federal republican alliance of the eighteen Han Chinese provinces. The additional central star represents the central government. The two flags are tied together by cords, from which fine streamers descend and gently curve upward. The outer crease of the left streamer is longer, a variant known as the “long outer crease.” Between the two flags at the top is an elliptical chrysanthemum motif with twelve petals. A circular border separates the inner motif from the inscriptions. Along the upper outer rim is the national title “中華民國” (“Republic of China”), written without interpuncts. Along the lower rim is the denomination “當十銅元” (“Ten-Cash Copper Coin”), all rendered in clerical script. The character “銅” (copper) is used to distinguish this variety, commonly referred to as the “clerical copper” type. Grapevines and tendrils decorate both sides between the upper and lower inscriptions.
The reverse depicts a “Jiahe” motif (symbolising auspicious grain). Five bundles of rice ears and four rice leaves are symmetrically arranged. Each bundle consists of a pair of rice ears in the form of a twin-ear spikelet. Since the Zhou dynasty, such naturally occurring twin spikelets, rare and associated with increased yield, have been regarded as auspicious and are known as “Jiahe” (auspicious grain). Both the Jiahe motif and the grapevine design on the obverse symbolise fertility and abundance, embodying the ideal of “prosperous harvests and sufficient provision for the people, thereby encouraging devotion to agriculture.” The central stalk is flanked by two elongated rice leaves, referred to as the “slender leaf” type. At the bottom, a bundle of rope is coiled precisely nineteen times, with both the start and end of the rope on the viewer-facing side, and the end dangling downward. A circular border encloses the design. Along the upper outer rim is the inscription “THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA,” representing the national title. The lower rim reads “TEN CASH,” indicating the denomination. The upper and lower inscriptions are separated on either side by circular dots.
The Hunan Mint was first established in AD 1898, during the 24th year of the Guangxu reign of the Qing dynasty, and ceased minting in AD 1909 (1st year of the Xuantong reign). It resumed operations in AD 1912 (1st year of the Republic), initially issuing coins bearing the Eighteen-Star emblem, and subsequently producing large quantities of ten-cash copper coins with the auspicious grain design. During the First World War, copper became a critical material for munitions, wiring, and shipbuilding, driving up its price. In response, Chinese mints issued higher denomination copper coins, such as twenty-cash pieces, whose face value exceeded their metal worth. Following the war, the price of copper plummeted, generating excessive profits for the mints.
In early AD 1918 (7th year of the Republic), Zhang Jingyao entered Hunan as military governor and provincial leader, ostensibly to campaign against the southern Constitutional Protection Movement led by Sun Yat-sen. In AD 1919 (8th year of the Republic), he expanded the Hunan Mint and issued large quantities of twenty-cash coins (referred to as “double copper coins” to distinguish them from the ten-cash “single copper coins”) and recklessly printed paper currency to enrich himself. The twenty-cash coins were poor in quality and often so debased that in some provinces they were accepted at only half their nominal value. From AD 1919 onwards, due to a nationwide surplus of copper coins, the central government repeatedly issued edicts halting production. Many provinces defied these orders. Eventually, the central government restricted copper shipments into Hunan, and the Hunan Provincial Assembly passed a resolution imposing a deadline to cease minting. The mint finally closed in AD 1925 (14th year of the Republic) when copper stocks were exhausted and the machinery was taken over by the provincial treasury.
The early republican period in Hunan was marked by political instability and frequent changes in military leadership. Initially governed by Tan Yankai, who advocated constitutional reform and brought temporary stability, the province fell under military control following the failed Second Revolution, becoming a battleground for rival warlords. Zhang Jingyao and other Beiyang-affiliated generals successively held power, bringing hardship to the population. In AD 1920 (9th year of the Republic), the “Expel Zhang Movement” emerged as local gentry and intellectuals rose against Zhang’s despotic rule, ultimately succeeding in removing him. Tan Yankai then returned to implement provincial self-governance, though hindered by numerous obstacles. By AD 1926 (15th year of the Republic), the National Revolutionary Army captured Changsha, and the left wing of the Kuomintang, in alliance with the Chinese Communist Party, initiated land reforms in Hunan. This led to the purging of local elites and transformed Hunan into a frontline region in the ensuing Nationalist-Communist conflict.
銅元背面中央為嘉禾圖,五束稻穗與四片稻葉對稱排列,稻穗成雙穗禾形態,即各串稻穗兩兩對生。自周代起,這種稻穗的自然突變便由於其稀有與增產的效果,被視為祥瑞,故稱「嘉禾」。嘉禾與正面葡萄藤幣圖,皆為豐饒多產之象徵,「取豐歲足民之義,垂勸農務本之規」。中央稻稈兩側夾葉較細長,稱「細葉」。下方繩團纏繞十九圈,綁繩頭尾皆在觀者一側,末端垂下。以環相隔,外圈上方環列「THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA」,即國號「中華民國」;下方環列「TEN CASH」即面額「當十」或「十文」。上下環列之幣文,以圓點分飾兩側相隔。