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!
Eastern Han Dynasty,
Gengshi Wu Zhu
(Star Below Version)
東漢
更始五銖
(穿下星版)
Item number: A3868
Year: AD 24-25
Material: Bronze
Size: 25.7 x 26.2 x 1.9 mm
Weight: 2.7 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This coin should be identified as a Wu Zhu cash coin of the early Eastern Han period, cast and circulated under Emperor Gengshi, and modelled on the form of the Three-Office Wu Zhu of the late Western Han.
The coin conforms to the traditional square-holed round form of the Sinosphere. The obverse bears an outer rim but lacks an inner border, while the reverse is provided with both an outer rim and an inner border. The inner border displays faint traces of four corner projections, and the field is plain and without ornament. The inscription “Wu Zhu” is rendered in seal script and read sequentially from right to left. The character Wu is executed with curved strokes, similar in structure to examples from the late Western Han, and appears to have been re-engraved or overstruck. In the character Zhu, the strokes of the Zhu component exhibit turns that are rounded yet retain a degree of angularity. Although the edge of the coin has undergone abrasion, it retains a slight curvature, differing from the smooth and straight edge characteristic of Western Han Wu Zhu coins. A small dot is positioned below the square hole, closely adjoining the inner border.
Emperor Gengshi, personal name Liu Xuan and style name Shenggong, was a descendant of the Western Han imperial house who rose amid the widespread turmoil at the end of Wang Mang’s Xin regime. During the Dihuang era, anti-Xin forces emerged across the empire; the Lülin armies were active in the Jingzhou region, and Liu Xuan was selected as emperor, adopting the reign title Gengshi. His regime defeated major Xin forces and entered the Guanzhong region in AD 23, subsequently establishing the capital at Chang’an, after which Wang Mang’s regime rapidly collapsed. Following the establishment of the Gengshi government, former Lülin leaders and local magnates were appointed, while many officials of the former Xin administration were purged; however, military discipline was lax and rewards and punishments were inconsistently applied, preventing effective integration of forces in Guanzhong and the eastern regions. Meanwhile, the Red Eyebrows grew in strength, relations with the Gengshi regime deteriorated, supplies in Guanzhong became scarce, and popular unrest occurred frequently. In AD 25, the Red Eyebrows entered Chang’an; Emperor Gengshi surrendered and was subsequently killed. His regime was short-lived and failed to re-establish stable central authority.