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!
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms
Former Shu
Tianhan Yuanbao
(Reverse With Upper Crescent and Lower Star Version)
五代十國
前蜀
天漢元寶
(背上月下星版)
Item number: A3796
Reference number: DCD#610-2
Year: AD 917
Material: Bronze
Size: 23.2 x 22.9 x 1.2 mm
Weight: 3.8 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This is a bronze Tianhan Yuanbao coin cast by Wang Jian, the founder of the Former Shu regime, which was based in Sichuan during the period of regional fragmentation known as the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms following the collapse of the Tang dynasty. The coin was issued under Wang Jian’s fifth reign title, Tianhan, used in AD 917.
The coin conforms to the traditional square-holed round form of the Han cultural sphere. The obverse inscription, Tianhan Yuanbao, is rendered in a hybrid style combining regular and clerical scripts; the clerical form of the character yuan is particularly close in style to that seen on Tang Kaiyuan Tongbao coins. On the reverse, above the square hole appears a crescent-shaped motif and below it a dot, a configuration known as “upper crescent and lower star on the reverse.” Coins of a similar type are reported to have been unearthed in Xindu, Sichuan, and are relatively rare.
During his rule over Sichuan, Wang Jian employed a total of six reign titles. In the early years of his regime, under the reigns of Tianfu (AD 901–907) and Wucheng (AD 908–910), no coinage was issued. It was not until the Yongping reign (AD 911) that coins corresponding to the reign title were first cast.
The Former Shu was a regime established by Wang Jian amid the turmoil at the end of the Tang dynasty, with Sichuan as its territorial base. Wang Jian rose from humble origins as a local ruffian and salt smuggler; taking advantage of the Huang Chao Rebellion, he joined the military and gradually gained control over the Sichuan Basin centred on Chengdu. In AD 907, dissatisfied with the domination of the Tang imperial house by Zhu Wen, Wang Jian declared himself king. During his reign, he refrained from initiating warfare and invested heavily in hydraulic works, enabling the population of Sichuan to live in relative stability and security. After his death, however, his successor Wang Yan proved dissolute and ineffectual, and the regime was invaded by the Later Tang. In AD 925, the Former Shu was annexed by the Later Tang, bringing an end to a state that had existed for only nineteen years.