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Tây Sơn dynasty
Nguyễn Văn Huệ
Quang Trung Thông Bảo
(Large-Head & Two Dots Thông, Thin Flan Version)
西山朝
阮文惠
光中通寶
(大頭雙點通薄版)
Item number: A3093
Year: AD 1788-1792
Material: Brass
Size: 21.2 x 21.2 x 0.1 mm
Weight: 1.6 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This is a coin cast in brass, known as the “Quang Trung Thông Bảo” (光中通寶), issued under the reign of Emperor Quang Trung, Nguyễn Văn Huệ (also known as Nguyễn Huệ), who later changed his name to Nguyễn Quang Bình. It was minted and circulated during the first to fifth years of the Quang Trung reign period (AD 1788–1792). In the fourth and fifth years of this reign, another coin type titled “Quang Trung Đại Bảo” (光中大宝) was also issued.
The coin follows the traditional form of a round piece with a square central hole, characteristic of the monetary systems within the Chinese cultural sphere. The obverse bears the inscription “Quang Trung Thong Bao” in regular script, arranged vertically from top to bottom and read from right to left. The “マ” component in the upper right of the character “Thong” is disproportionately large, a variant referred to as “large-headed Thong” (da tou tong). The “辶” radical in “Thong” features two dots on the left, and the final sweeping stroke is rendered with a folded brush movement. In the character “Bao,” the “缶” radical appears to be written in the form of “尔.” A raised area is present on the field between the characters “Quang” and “Bao,” and a broken stroke is visible in the upper left corner of the central hole. The characters “Quang,” “Trung,” and “Bao” extend into the central hole, while “Trung” and “Bao” also connect to the rim. The reverse is plain and uninscribed. The coin is extremely thin.
By the mid-18th century, although the Lê emperors of the Later Lê Restoration nominally ruled the country, actual power in the north was held by the Trịnh lords, while the Nguyễn lords governed the south from their stronghold in Huế (then Phú Xuân), effectively maintaining a divided Vietnam for over two centuries. Prolonged military stalemate across this north-south divide led successive Nguyễn lords to pursue expansion westward and southward: interfering in Cambodia and engaging in campaigns against Champa and Siam (present-day Thailand). In all theatres—north, west, and south—the mountainous Tây Sơn region was heavily relied upon for military mobilisation and logistical support, laying the structural groundwork for rebellion.
The Tây Sơn dynasty was initiated in AD 1771 when three brothers—Nguyễn Văn Nhạc, Nguyễn Văn Lữ, and Nguyễn Văn Huệ—rose up in the Tây Sơn region to oppose the corruption and incompetence of the Nguyễn lords. Backed by seasoned highland warriors, they quickly seized Quy Nhơn and Quảng Ngãi, thereby disrupting the long-standing north-south divide. In AD 1775, the Nguyễn capital of Phú Xuân (present-day Huế) fell. In AD 1777, Nguyễn Văn Huệ captured Gia Định, and the last Nguyễn lord was killed. By AD 1778, Nguyễn Văn Nhạc proclaimed himself the Central Emperor, enfeoffing Nguyễn Văn Lữ and Nguyễn Văn Huệ as the Kings of Đông Định and Bắc Bình, respectively—nominal appointments that in effect signified a division of territories.
Nguyễn Văn Huệ, the most militarily gifted of the Tây Sơn brothers, led a northern campaign in AD 1786 that overthrew the Trịnh regime, and in AD 1789 decisively defeated Qing forces sent in support of the Lê dynasty. His victory brought him great renown, and he was subsequently crowned emperor at the Ngu Binh Mountain in Phú Xuân, adopting the reign title Quang Trung. He was also recognised by the Qianlong Emperor of the Qing dynasty as the “King of Annam”. He then embarked on a programme of administrative reform, although internal strife and factionalism persisted within his court. Upon his death in AD 1792, the throne passed to his young son Nguyễn Quang Toản, whose reign was plagued by disorder. Taking advantage of this instability, Nguyễn Phúc Ánh—backed by French missionaries—launched a counter-offencive and, by AD 1802, had unified the country and established the Nguyễn dynasty, thereby bringing the Tây Sơn regime to an end.
Nguyễn Văn Huệ came to be regarded as a national hero for his defeat of the Qing army and as a symbol of resistance against foreign aggression. His promotion of the chữ Nôm script earned him recognition as a key figure in the assertion of Vietnamese cultural independence. His policies of organising ethnic minorities to oppose the Nguyễn lords also provided a model for peripheral resistance against central authority. In modern times, particularly within the revolutionary discourse of the Communist Party of Vietnam, Nguyễn Văn Huệ has been mythologised as a symbol of anti-imperialism and nationalism.
物件編號: A3093
年代: 公元 1788-1792 年
材質: 黃銅
尺寸: 23.2 x 23.0 x 0.3 mm
重量: 1.6 g
來源: 斯賓克拍賣行 2023
這是一枚由光中帝阮文惠(Nguyễn Văn Huệ),或稱阮惠(Nguyễn Huệ),後改名阮光平(Nguyễn Quang Bình),其於年號光中元年至光中五年間(公元1788-1792),所鑄行之「光中通寶」,黃銅質。光中四、五年間,另發行「光中大宝」。