Northern Song Dynasty

Zhidao Yuanbao

(Cursive Script, Small Characters Version)

北宋

至道元寶

(草書小字版)

Item number: A3935

Reference number: DCD#41-7

Year: AD 995-997

Material: Bronze

Size: 24.7 x 24.7 x 0.9 mm

Weight: 4.3 g

Provenance: Spink 2023

This coin, inscribed with “Zhidao Yuanbao,” was minted during the reign of Emperor Taizong, the second emperor of the Northern Song Dynasty, under his final era name, “Zhidao.” Throughout Emperor Taizong’s 21-year rule, he employed a total of five different era names.

The coin takes the form of the traditional round cash coin with a square central hole characteristic of the Sinosphere. The obverse bears the inscription Zhidao Yuanbao in cursive script, read in clockwise order beginning from the top; all four characters derive from the emperor’s own calligraphy. In this cursive style, the character zhi (至) resembles a monk seated cross-legged, hence the coin’s nickname, the “Little Monk coin”. The script is relatively small in size. The reverse is plain and without inscription.

Emperor Taizong of Song, Zhao Kuangyi, was the younger brother of the founding emperor, Zhao Kuangyin. Zhao Kuangyi’s succession is marred by the suspicion of fratricide, famously known as the “Candle Shadows and Axe Sounds” incident, coupled with several military failures during his northern campaigns against the Liao Dynasty. Consequently, he shifted his focus towards cultural endeavours, making it his mission to promote Confucianism. The two brothers, Emperor Taizu and Taizong, are often regarded as embodying the military and civil foundations of the Song Dynasty, respectively.

Emperor Taizu, during the Chunhua period (AD 990-AD 994), personally inscribed the calligraphy for the new currency “Chunhua Yuanbao,” making it the first coin in Chinese history to feature the emperor’s handwriting, known as “Imperial Script Money” (御書錢).

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.

物件編號: A3935

參考書目編號: DCD#41-7

年代: 公元 995-997 年

材質: 青銅

尺寸: 24.7 x 24.7 x 0.9 mm

重量: 4.3 g

來源: 斯賓克拍賣行 2023

這是北宋的第二任皇帝宋太宗,使用其最後一個年號鑄造的「至道元寶」。宋太宗統治的21年間,前後使用過五個年號。

錢幣形制為漢文化圈傳統的方孔圓錢。正面錢文草書「至道元寶」,自上而右旋讀,皆出自宋太宗的親筆書法。其中草書「至」寫法形似一僧人結跏盤坐,因而被暱稱為「小和尚錢」。字體較小。錢幣背面光素無文。

宋太宗趙匡義為宋朝開國皇帝趙匡胤的弟弟,由於趙匡義的繼承深陷殺害哥哥的「燭影斧聲」嫌疑,和數次北伐遼國的軍事失敗,使他轉而推行文化工作以發揚儒學為己任。宋太祖和太宗兩兄弟被視為一武一文,奠定宋朝的基礎。宋太祖更在淳化年間(公元990至994年),親手書寫新貨幣「淳化元寶」書法,為中國歷史上第一種皇帝親筆書寫的「御書錢」。

兩宋幣制複雜,正式行用的幣材便有銅鐵兩種,配合紙幣相權。鐵錢的官方廣泛採用為宋代開歷史之先,其因為銅礦的缺乏,以及於邊路防止銅錢外流。白銀則逐漸佔有重要地位。銅幣面額折一至折十不等。各路依需求各自鑄錢,有些只用銅錢,有些只用鐵錢,有些銅鐵兼用。字體則楷書、隸書、篆書、瘦金體等不一而足。幣材則多以青銅為主,實則為銅錫鉛三元合金。

類似/相同物件 請看:

臺灣 國立歷史博物館 National Museum of History

https://collections.culture.tw/nmh_collectionsweb/collection.aspx?GID=M1MXMYMAMXM2

中國 國家博物館 National Museum of China

https://www.chnmuseum.cn/zp/zpml/hb/202202/t20220228_253691.shtml

更多相關訊息請參考:

編纂委員會編,《中國錢幣大辭典·宋遼西夏金編·北宋卷》,北京:中華書局,2005。 (DCD#)

彭信威,《中国货币史》,北京:中国人民大学出版社,2020。

小島毅著;游韻馨譯,《中國思想與宗教的奔流:宋朝》,新北:臺灣商務印書館,2019。

三浦清吾編集,《安南泉譜 手類銭部》,東京:小野谷,1976。 (ANQP#)

広瀬輝夫著,《島銭分類泉譜——附録・安南手類銭・安法手の分類譜》,東京:天保堂,1986。

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