This is a ten-cash copper coin, a type of “Founding of the Republic Commemorative Coin,” minted by the Wuchang Mint and issued by the Ministry of Finance of the Republic of China between AD 1912 and 1928.
The obverse features the denomination “Ten Cash” inscribed in clerical script at the centre. On either side of the inscription are decorative bundles of ears of grain and foliage, with the leaves tied together by tasselled cords, forming an almost perfect circle. A thin ring separates the central motif from the outer legend. Encircling the top edge is the inscription “THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA”, representing the national name “Zhonghua Minguo”. This is flanked on both sides by four-petal floral ornaments, which separate the two lines of text. Along the bottom edge appears the inscription “TEN CASH”, denoting the coin’s denomination.
The reverse features a crossed flag motif at its centre. The flag on the right is the Five-Coloured Flag used during the Beiyang Government period, symbolising the union of five ethnic groups. The stripes of the flag are engraved in a gradation from top to bottom, a style referred to as the “wrinkled stripe flag”. The flag on the left is the Iron-Blood Nineteen-Star Flag, which symbolised the federated republic of the eighteen Han provinces after the Wuchang Uprising. This standard version is characterised by nine incised (intaglio) points forming a nonagonal star and nineteen raised (relief) stars, arranged in a circular formation unaffected by the fluttering of the flag, hence termed the “circular intaglio nine-point” pattern. The two flags are crossed and tied with cords into a knot. A string of fine beads forms a separating ring around the central motif. The upper arc contains the national title “Zhonghua Minguo” (“Republic of China”) in regular script, while the lower arc reads “Founding Commemorative Coin”, also in regular script. On either side, five-petal flowers with central dots are placed to separate the inscriptions.
Both the obverse and reverse rims of the coin are surrounded by a raised ring with inward-facing rectangular fine denticles, referred to as “horse teeth”, serving to protect the coin’s design. The coin’s edge is smooth and unornamented.
The origin of this coin can be traced to initiatives by Zhang Zhidong, Viceroy of Huguang, who in AD 1900 (Guangxu 26) ordered the New Branch of the Silver Coin Bureau to begin trial production of ten-cash copper coins. Mass production commenced the following year upon imperial approval. In AD 1902 (Guangxu 28), the bureau was reorganised into the Hubei Copper Coin Bureau, dedicated solely to coin production, with a branch established at the Hanyang Arsenal to expand output—eventually becoming the nation’s leading producer. In AD 1910 (Xuantong 2), these institutions were consolidated into the Wuchang Mint. After the Xinhai Revolution, the mint became a major coinage facility under the Hubei Military Government, the Provisional Government, and later the Beiyang Government.
In AD 1912 (1st year of the Republic), the Republic of China was established, marking the end of monarchy and the rise of republican governance. The new government decided to issue “Founding of the Republic Commemorative Coins” to promote republican ideals, stabilise public sentiment and finances, and to replace the traditional Chinese cash coins with square holes. The form and style of the new coinage aligned with international monetary standards. The initiative was first led by the Nanjing Provisional Government and subsequently continued under the Beiyang Government. Thereafter, due to prolonged political instability and the fragmentation of authority among regional warlords, copper coins, though nominally auxiliary currency, in practise formed a separate monetary system. Their exchange rate with the silver-based primary currency fluctuated constantly. Coin designs varied across regions, and there were considerable differences in minting quality and copper composition. The units of denomination were also diverse and complex, including wen, mei, fen, li, and xian. In AD 1935 (24th year of the Republic), the Nationalist government initiated further monetary unification, designating the Shanghai Mint as the sole institution authorised to issue coinage, thereby bringing an end to the copper coin system inherited from the late Qing dynasty and ushering in the era of legal tender currency.
物件編號: A2966
年代: 公元 1912-1928 年
材質: 紅銅
尺寸: 28.2 x 28.2 x 1.4 mm
重量: 7.1 g
製造地: 武昌造幣廠
來源: 斯賓克拍賣行 2023
這是一枚由武昌造幣廠所鑄,財政部於公元1912至1928年所發行之開國紀念幣,面額十文之銅元。
銅元正面中央幣文為「十文」隸書,兩側以嘉禾及草葉簇擁,兩側草葉以纓相繫,結環幾呈正圓。以細環相隔,外圈上方環列英文「THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA」即國號「中華民國」;以四瓣花飾分裂兩側,相隔兩行幣文,下方環列「TEN CASH」,即「十文」。