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Southern Ming,
Yongli Tongbao
(Central-Connecting Water Yong, Two Dots Square-Head Tong, Reverse With Guo Version)
南明
永曆通寶
(中接粗水小永二點方頭通背國版)
Item number: A3335
Year: AD 1646-1683
Material: Brass
Size: 24.0 x 24.0 mm
Weight: 5.6 g
Provenance:
1. Spink 2023
2. Dr. Werner Klaus Burger Collection
This is a brass coin known as Yongli Tongbao, minted during the reign of the Yongli Emperor of the Southern Ming dynasty.
The coin follows the traditional Han cultural style of a round coin with a square hole in the centre. The obverse bears the inscription “永曆通寶” (Yongli Tongbao) in regular script, read vertically from top to bottom and horizontally from right to left. The character Yong (永) is rendered in a variant form resembling the components “二” and “水” (𣱵), with the central stroke (亅) connecting to the flanking dots (冫), a style referred to as “Zhongjie Shui Yong” (central-connecting water Yong). This form features thick strokes and a relatively smaller character size, thus also termed “Coarse Water Small Yong.” The character Li (曆) is written with two he (禾) components beneath the radical 厂. The character Tong (通) has its yong (甬) component beginning with the radical マ rendered as コ, a form called “Square-Head Tong.” The character Bao (寶) displays a 缶 radical written in the form of 尔, while the 辶 radical contains two dots instead of one, though the first dot is worn and indistinct. On the reverse, above the square hole, is a small character 國 (guo, “state”), the meaning of which remains uncertain.
Yongli Tongbao coins exist in numerous varieties, with wide variation in both form and quantity. Amidst the turmoil of the late Ming and early Qing period, the Yongli Emperor had little effective control over political affairs; most regional authorities, including military leaders and warlords, exercised de facto autonomy, including the minting of coins. As a result, these coins exhibit strong regional characteristics. Based on style and archaeological provenance, the coins are generally categorised into five types: (1) those from Guangdong, often bearing the reverse characters 定 or 國; (2) those from Guangxi, with reverses such as 工, 戶, 督, 留, 粵, 輔, and 明; (3) those from Yongzhou in Hunan, bearing 工, 戶, 御, 敕, 部, 督, or 道; (4) fractional silver-equivalent coins from Yunnan and Guizhou, bearing marks such as 五厘, 一分, or 工; and (5) plain-reverse coins from Fujian and Taiwan, some of which were reportedly commissioned by Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga) and his father, and minted in Nagasaki, Japan. The earliest coinage began in Guangdong and Guangxi, followed by southern Hunan, Yunnan-Guizhou, and finally Fujian-Taiwan, where production ceased only in AD 1683 upon Zheng Keshuang’s surrender to the Qing. Early issues were predominantly small denomination cash coins, while later examples include debased silver-equivalent and nominal “two-cash” coins, with a progressive decline in both weight and metal quality.
Coins bearing the reverse characters 國 and 定 share stylistic similarities and are found in overlapping regions. Early numismatic catalogues classified them among the so-called “Imperial Edict Coins” (chì wén qián 敕文錢). During the Qianlong reign of the Qing dynasty, numismatist Weng Shupei, in his Guquan Huikao (Collected Studies on Ancient Coins), selected twelve reverse characters from Yongli Tongbao coins—御、敕、督、部、道、府、留、粵、輔、明、定、國—and interpreted them as a directive from the Yongli Emperor to his civil and military officials to defend Guangdong and Guangxi, support the Southern Ming regime, and stabilise the nation. Another interpretation links 定 and 國 to the Southern Ming general Li Dingguo, a former subordinate of the Great Western regime, suggesting these coins may have been cast under his authority in Guangxi. An alternative theory proposes that coins bearing the character 國 were minted by Zheng Chenggong, referring to his title “Guoxingye” (Lord of the Imperial Surname), bestowed during the Longwu reign of the Southern Ming (AD 1645–1646), when he was granted the imperial surname Zhu and appointed “Grand General for the Suppression of Rebellion” (Zhaotao Dajiangjun).
Li Dingguo, originally a general under Zhang Xianzhong during the late Ming period, later pledged allegiance to the Southern Ming and became a prominent anti-Qing military commander. Alongside Zheng Chenggong and Sun Kewang, he was regarded as one of the three main pillars of the Southern Ming resistance. Known for his military prowess, Li was hailed in his time as “a match for ten thousand men.” After the Yongli Emperor ascended the throne, Li remained loyal to the Southern Ming and formed a strategic alliance with Sun Kewang to oppose the Qing. In AD 1652, he achieved a major victory over Wu Sangui in Guizhou, temporarily recapturing Guangxi and Guizhou and greatly boosting morale. However, internal strife later emerged due to deteriorating relations with Sun, weakening the broader resistance. In AD 1654, Li launched another campaign into Guangdong but failed to reverse the decline, ultimately retreating to the Yunnan–Guizhou region. In AD 1658, as Qing forces advanced into Yunnan, he escorted the Yongli Emperor into Burma. Following the emperor’s capture and execution by the Qing in AD 1662, Li Dingguo died in Burma, reportedly from grief, at the age of 42.
Zheng Chenggong (AD 1624–1662), born Zheng Sen in Hirado, Japan, was the son of the prominent maritime merchant and military figure Zheng Zhilong and his Japanese wife Tagawa. Raised with a Confucian education, he studied in Nanjing during the Chongzhen reign and was later granted the imperial surname Zhu by the Longwu regime of the Southern Ming, hence widely known as Guoxingye (Lord of the Imperial Surname). After the Qing conquest of Jiangnan in AD 1645, Zheng led a naval resistance from his bases in Xiamen and Kinmen, establishing a formidable maritime force that became the principal military support of the Southern Ming. In AD 1661, he launched an expedition against Dutch colonial forces in Taiwan. After nine months of siege warfare, he compelled the Dutch East India Company to surrender in AD 1662, thereby reclaiming Taiwan and establishing the city of Chengtianfu (modern Tainan) as the capital of his regime. He died the same year in Taiwan, aged 39.
The Yongli Emperor, personal name Zhu Youlang, reigned from AD 1646 to 1662. A great-grandson of the Wanli Emperor, he was the final sovereign of the Southern Ming. In AD 1644, rebel leader Li Zicheng captured Beijing, resulting in the collapse of the Ming central government. Surviving Ming loyalists established the Hongguang regime in Nanjing, continuing the dynasty in what is known as the Southern Ming. After the capture and execution of the Hongguang Emperor in AD 1645, various Ming princes—including the Princes of Lu, Tang, Rui, Jingjiang, and others—proclaimed regencies, ruling autonomously. The Prince of Tang later declared himself the Longwu Emperor, while the Prince of Gui, Zhu Youlang, was proclaimed emperor in Zhaoqing, adopting the reign title Yongli. Amid continued Qing advances, the Yongli regime was forced into successive retreats, ultimately confined to the Yunnan–Guizhou region. Its survival depended largely on military commanders such as Zheng Chenggong, Li Dingguo, and Sun Kewang. However, internal factionalism—particularly between Li and Sun—critically undermined the resistance. In AD 1658, the Qing court dispatched Wu Sangui to lead a campaign into Yunnan, prompting the Yongli Emperor to flee to Burma and seek asylum from the Toungoo dynasty. In AD 1662, under pressure from the Qing, the Burmese king surrendered him, and he was executed by strangulation in Kunming at the age of 39, marking the final end of the Ming dynasty.