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Northern Song Dynasty
Mingdao Yuanbao
(Regular Script, Standard Characters, Narrow Hole Version)
北宋
明道元寶
(楷書正字狹穿版)
Item number: A3972
Reference number: DCD#78-6
Year: AD 1032-1033
Material: Bronze
Size: 24.9 x 24.9 x 0.9 mm
Weight: 3.2 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This is the Mingdao Yuanbao (明道元寶) minted during the second regnal era of Emperor Renzong (仁宗) of the Northern Song (北宋) dynasty, who was the fourth sovereign of the line. Throughout his forty-one-year reign, Zhao Zhen (趙禎) utilised a total of nine distinct era names.
The numismatic form follows the traditional tradition of the Sinospheric cultural circle, characterised by a circular design with a central square aperture. The obverse inscription features the characters “Mingdao Yuanbao” (明道元寶) rendered in regular script, intended to be read in a clockwise circumscription beginning from the top. The central square hole is relatively small in proportion. On the reverse, the outer rim is notably broad, while the field remains plain and unadorned, devoid of any decorative motifs or inscriptions.
Emperor Renzong Zhao Zhen reigned from AD 1022 to 1063 and was the fourth emperor of the Northern Song. During his reign, the strength of the state remained stable and society was relatively prosperous, a period traditionally known as the “Flourishing Governance of Renzong”. Politically, he esteemed civil governance and employed eminent ministers such as Fan Zhongyan, Bao Zheng, Han Qi, and Ouyang Xiu. He promoted the civil service examinations and institutional reform, and although these measures repeatedly encountered opposition from conservative forces, they laid important foundations for the later Xining Reforms. Renzong was by temperament tolerant, humane, and lenient towards his officials, and he was willing to accept remonstrance. Although factional conflict periodically arose during his reign, the political situation as a whole remained stable. On several occasions he personally reviewed miscarriages of justice, and he also advocated Confucian learning and frugality. In foreign affairs, he ultimately chose to maintain peace agreements with the Liao and Western Xia, thereby avoiding large-scale warfare. By exchanging annual payments for frontier stability, he helped create the comparatively stable situation that characterised the middle Northern Song period.
The monetary system of the Northern and Southern Song was highly complex. Among officially circulating media, both copper and iron coinage were employed, alongside paper currency, which functioned in parallel. Silver also gradually assumed increasing importance. Copper coins were issued in denominations ranging from value one to value ten. The various circuits minted coinage according to local demand: some used only copper coinage, some only iron coinage, and some employed both. The calligraphic styles used on coins were likewise diverse, including regular script, clerical script, seal script, and Slender Gold script. The simultaneous issue of coins bearing multiple scripts first appeared with the Chunhua Yuanbao under Emperor Taizong, whereas the first issue of true matched coins—that is, series of coins similar in form but differing in calligraphic style—appears to have begun with the Tiansheng Yuanbao under Emperor Renzong.