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Great Zhou,
Zhaowu Tongbao,
(Reverse With Large Gong Version)
大周
昭武通寶
(背大工版)
Item number: A3445
Year: AD 1678
Material: Brass
Size: 23.0 x 22.8 x 1.0 mm
Weight: 3.2 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This coin is the “Zhaowu Tongbao,” a ten-wen denomination cast in brass under the reign of Wu Sangui, who declared himself Emperor of the Wu Zhou regime in the seventeenth year of Kangxi (AD 1678), adopting the era name Zhaowu. Its form resembles that of Ming dynasty coins.
The obverse bears an outer rim, which is relatively broad, and the square central hole is furnished with an inner border. The inscription reads Zhaowu Tongbao in regular script and is read vertically from top to bottom and then from right to left. In the character bao (寶), the fou 缶 component is written with er 尔, producing the form 寳. The reverse likewise has both an outer rim and an inner border around the central hole. Below the square hole on the reverse appears the character gong (工), executed in relatively large script. This gong most likely refers to the Ministry of Works, one of the Six Ministries; under both the Ming and Qing central governments, the Ministries of Works and Revenue traditionally possessed the authority to cast coinage.
Although the Zhaowu Tongbao closely resembles Ming coins in form, its monetary policy continued the late Ming practice of using silver as the primary currency and copper as a secondary currency. The concept of “proxy silver coins” with a fixed silver-to-coin ratio, as seen in the Zhaowu Tongbao, was a policy inherited from the Shunzhi era. In the second year of Shunzhi (AD 1645), it was established that ten wen equated to one fen of silver, consistent with the Zhaowu Tongbao.
Wu Sangui (AD 1612–1678), originally a prominent Ming general stationed in Liaodong, later facilitated the Qing entry through Shanhai Pass, aiding in the defeat of Li Zicheng’s forces, and subsequently surrendered to the Qing court. He was enfeoffed as the Prince of Pingxi and tasked with governing Yunnan. To stabilise the southwest, the early Qing established the Three Feudatories system, granting Wu Sangui, Shang Kexi, and Geng Jingzhong significant military, administrative, and fiscal autonomy as feudatory princes. However, the growing power of the feudatories posed a threat to the central Qing authority. In the early Kangxi period, the Qing court resolved to abolish the feudatories, prompting Wu Sangui to launch the Revolt of the Three Feudatories in AD 1673 under the banner of “opposing the Qing and restoring the Ming.” In AD 1677, as the revolt faltered, Geng Jingzhong and Shang Kexi surrendered to the Qing. In AD 1678, to bolster morale, Wu Sangui proclaimed himself Emperor, establishing the Wu Zhou regime with the era name Zhaowu and designating Hengzhou as its capital. Despite its claim to restore the Ming, the Wu Zhou regime was primarily centred on the Wu family, relying on military control and coin minting to sustain its finances. Wu Sangui died later that year, succeeded by his grandson Wu Shifan, but the regime rapidly collapsed, extinguished by Qing forces in AD 1681. Wu Sangui and the Wu Zhou regime remain controversial in historical discourse, viewed alternately as symbols of rebellion or as figures of transitional significance.