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Northern Song Dynasty
Chunhua Yuanbao
(Running Script, Standard Characters, Small Module, Flat Reverse, Thin Version)
北宋
淳化元寶
(行書正字小樣平背薄版)
Item number: A3914
Year: AD 990-994
Material: Bronze
Size: 24.5 x 24.5 x 0.7 mm
Weight: 3.15 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This is a Chunhua Yuanbao coin, cast under Emperor Taizong, the second ruler of the Northern Song, and named after his fourth reign title, Chunhua. It is regarded as the first “imperial calligraphy coin” (yushu qian) in Chinese history, in that the inscription was written in the emperor’s own hand; it is also the earliest issue to circulate as paired coins of identical fabric yet bearing inscriptions in different calligraphic scripts. During Taizong’s 21-year reign, five reign titles were employed in succession, and Chunhua signifies “the ruler’s earnest and benevolent moral instruction of the people”.
During his 21-year reign, Emperor Taizong used five different era names, with “Chunhua” symbolising the “benevolent moral education of the ruler towards the people.”
The coin follows the East Asian tradition of a round cash coin with a square central perforation. The obverse inscription “Chunhua Yuanbao” is rendered in running script and read from the top, proceeding clockwise. The piece is comparatively small. The reverse surfaces and rims have been uniformly ground flat, leaving a smooth, plain surface without any inscription.
The “Chunhua Yuanbao” coin comes in three different script styles: regular script, running script, and cursive script, all of which were personally written by Emperor Taizong. Emperor Taizong, Zhao Kuangyi, was the younger brother of Zhao Kuangyin, the founding emperor of the Song Dynasty. Due to suspicions surrounding his succession—infamously referred to as the “Candlelight and Axe Shadows” incident, implying his involvement in his brother’s death—along with several failed military campaigns against the Liao Dynasty, Taizong shifted his focus towards cultural endeavours, particularly the promotion of Confucianism.
Emperor Taizong of the Song Dynasty was renowned for his exceptional skill in calligraphy. He often gifted hand-written fans to court officials as tokens of favour. The famous Northern Song calligrapher Mi Fu praised Taizong’s artistry, saying that his regular script embodied the “True Eight Principles” (真造八法), his cursive reached “spiritual mastery” (草入三昧), his running script had no equal (行書無對), and his “flying white” strokes (飛白) were divine. The poet and former prime minister Wang Yucheng, who had praised the calligraphy on the “Chunhua Yuanbao” coin as mastering the “art of the bird-returning stroke” (盡返鵲回之法) and surpassing even “the fame of the heavenly dragon and earthly horse” (掩天龍地馬之名), continued to hold the coin dear even after being demoted from office, writing poems inspired by its inscription.
The coinage system of the Northern and Southern Song was complex. Officially circulating media included both copper and iron cash, complemented by paper money that functioned in mutual relation to them. The large-scale official adoption of iron cash was historically unprecedented in the Song, driven by shortages of copper ore and by frontier-region policies intended to prevent copper cash from flowing outward. Silver also gradually assumed an increasingly important role. Copper cash circulated in multiple nominal values, ranging from equivalents of one to ten. Coinage was cast by the various circuits according to local needs: some used only copper cash, others only iron, and others employed both. Calligraphic styles likewise varied, including regular, clerical, seal script, and “Slender Gold” script, among others. Although commonly described as “bronze”, the alloy in practice was typically a ternary mixture of copper, tin, and lead.