Digital museum showcasing the collection of worldwide legends over the years! 千古不朽博物館展示多年來收藏的世界傳奇故事!
Western Xia,
Tiansheng Yuanbao
(Iron, Broad Bao Version)
西夏
天盛元寶
(鐵質闊寶版)
Item number: A3789
Reference number: DCD#83-5
Year: AD 1149-1169
Material: Iron
Size: 23.3 x 23.0 x 1.3 mm
Weight: 2.9 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This is a Tiansheng Yuanbao coin cast during the Tiansheng reign period by Emperor Renzong of the Western Xia, Li Renxiao.
The obverse bears the inscription “Tiansheng Yuanbao” in regular script, read from the top and proceeding clockwise to the right. The character bao (寶) is rendered in a relatively broad form, conventionally termed “broad bao”. The layout of the inscription corresponds to that of issues with the reverse character xi (西), while the field of the coin is plain and uninscribed.
According to the Revised and Newly Promulgated Statutes and Ordinances of the Tiansheng Reign (Tiansheng gai jiu xin ding lüling), the circulation of iron coinage was restricted to the jurisdiction of the Southern Court Military Commission of the Western Xia and was prohibited from entering the capital. In modern times, such coins have been unearthed predominantly in the Hetao region of Inner Mongolia. Owing to the intensity of Mongol incursions and to neglect during the compilation of official histories in the Yuan period, relatively few historical sources on the Western Xia have survived, and the precise territorial extent of the Southern Court remains unclear. According to Song-dynasty sources, the Western Xia established the Tongji Supervisorate for coin casting in the tenth year of the Tiansheng reign (AD 1158); in reality, coin production began considerably earlier, although large-scale minting appears to have commenced only after the establishment of the Tongji Supervisorate, which was probably devoted primarily to copper coinage. Issues bearing the reverse character xi may instead have been produced by the Western Xia Xixing Supervisorate.
The Western Xia state was founded by Li Yuanhao of the Tangut Tuoba clan, who proclaimed himself emperor in the third year of the Daqing reign of Emperor Jingzong of Western Xia, corresponding to the fifth year of Jingyou of Emperor Renzong of the Northern Song, that is, 1038 AD. The capital, Xingling, was located in present-day Ningxia, and the regime established its own Tangut script and a comprehensive set of administrative institutions. Over time, Western Xia formed a tripartite balance of power with the two Song dynasties, the Liao, and the Jin. The dynasty lasted through ten emperors and endured for 190 years. Its last ruler, Li Xian, having failed to resist the Mongols, surrendered and was executed in the second year of the Baoyi reign (1227 AD). By as early as the Zhenguan reign of Emperor Chongzong, Western Xia had already established a unified system of laws and ordinances. In the early Tiansheng period, the Revised and Newly Promulgated Statutes and Ordinances of the Tiansheng Reign were issued, through which Emperor Renzong initially sought to reform existing practices, renew institutions, and preserve imperial authority. However, Allowing the Song defector Ren Dejing, then Vice Prefect of Xi’an Prefecture under Song rule, to present his daughter to the emperor, Ren Dejing subsequently entered the court and monopolised power. In the first year of the Qianyou reign (1170 AD), Ren Dejing’s attempt to partition territory and establish a separate state failed, and he was executed. Possibly out of concern over renewed military rebellion, Western Xia’s military preparedness gradually declined thereafter.