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Liao Dynasty
Da’an Yuanbao
(Shortened an Version)
遼
大安元寶
(短安版)
Item number: A3782
Reference number: SNMC#2-20
Year: AD 1085–1094
Material: Bronze
Size: 23.9 x 23.9 x 0.9 mm
Weight: 3.05 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This is the Da’an Yuanbao, cast under the fourth reign title, Da’an (AD 1085–1094), of Emperor Daozong of the Liao dynasty, Yelü Hongji, the eighth ruler of the dynasty. From the Dakang era of Emperor Daozong of the Liao dynasty onward, the coin names were uniformly designated as Yuanbao.
The coin conforms to the traditional Sinosphere type of a round coin with a square central perforation. The obverse inscription, Da’an Yuanbao, is read from the top and then clockwise. The calligraphy combines elements of regular and clerical scripts. The character an is rendered in an shortened form, a variety known as the “shortened an” type, which is comparatively common. The reverse field is plain and uninscribed.
According to Liao institutional practice, coinage was mostly cast by the Directorate of Revenue in the Eastern Capital Circuit, which was subordinate to the Southern Administration Grand King, and the minting location was probably the administrative centre at Liaoyang Prefecture. In addition, agencies responsible for money and textiles were also established in regions such as the Liaoxi Circuit, Pingzhou Circuit, Changchun Prefecture, and Yuzhou, which likely possessed mining and metallurgical facilities as well.
The Liao dynasty, also known as the Khitan, originated from a nomadic tribal confederation in northeastern China; the term Khitan is also associated with the meaning “iron.” In AD 907, when the tribal leader Yelü Abaoji proclaimed the founding of the state, the Liao rapidly became a dominant power on the northern Asian steppe and exerted substantial pressure on the Han Chinese regimes to the south.
Emperor Daozong, Yelü Hongji, reigned from AD 1055 to 1101 and shortly thereafter formally adopted the dynastic name Great Liao. Despite his long reign, he was characterised by extravagance and political corruption, under which the state entered a period of decline. A succession of crises—including the Luan River uprising, the miscarriage of justice in the Shixiangci affair, the rebellion of Yelü Yixin, and the Mogusi revolt—destabilised the central government. Yelü Hongji was also a devout patron of Buddhism, expending vast resources on the construction of monasteries and pagodas, leading later generations to remark that “the Liao was ruined through devotion to Buddhism.” During his reign, the Jurchen gradually absorbed other tribes and rose to prominence. Ultimately, in AD 1125, all five Liao capitals fell, the last emperor, Tianzuo, was captured, and the Great Liao collapsed. Remnant forces under figures such as Yelü Dashi fled westward into Central Asia, where they established the Western Liao.