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Northern Song Dynasty
Huangsong Tongbao
(Clerical Script, Mu Song Version)
北宋
皇宋通寶
(隸書木宋版)
Item number: A4002
Reference number: Yan#482、DCD#91-5
Year: AD 1039-1054
Material: Bronze
Size: 25.4 x 25.3 x 1.0 mm
Weight: 4.05 g
Provenance: Spink 2023
This specimen is the Huangsong Tongbao (皇宋通寶), a dynastic title coinage cast between AD 1039 and 1054 (from the second year of the Baoyuan (寶元) era to the sixth year of the Huangyou (皇祐) era) during the reign of Emperor Renzong (宋仁宗), the fourth monarch of the Northern Song Dynasty. While the numismatic inscriptions of successive dynasties primarily utilised era names (nianhao 年號), the Northern Song presented only two exceptions: the Songyuan Tongbao (宋元通寶) and the Huangsong Tongbao. The former arguably followed the tradition of dynastic title coinage established during the founding of the states in the Five Dynasties period, whereas the Huangsong Tongbao was issued specifically to avoid the repetitive use of the character Bao (寶, treasure) within the era name. During his forty-one-year reign, Zhao Zhen (趙禎), known as Emperor Renzong, utilised nine distinct era names.
The physical form of the coin conforms to the traditional round shape with a square central perforation characteristic of the Sinospheric cultural orbit. The obverse inscription features the characters Huangsong Tongbao (皇宋通寶) in clerical script (lishu 隸書), read top-to-bottom and right-to-left. The 木 (wood) component of the character Song (宋) is wider than its 宀 (crown) radical, and the head of the 木 component is almost joined with the initial dot of the 宀 radical. The outer rim is slightly offset towards the right axis. The inner border is irregular, displaying traces of unpolished residual copper flow. The reverse of the coin is a plain back type with a slightly broad outer rim, entirely devoid of any denominations or inscriptions.
Zhao Zhen (Emperor Renzong), who reigned from AD 1022 to 1063, was the fourth emperor of the Northern Song. His reign was characterised by stable national strength and relative social prosperity, a period historiographically lauded as the “Minor Golden Age of Renzong” (Renzong Shengzhi 仁宗盛治). Politically, he championed civilian governance and appointed eminent officials such as Fan Zhongyan (范仲淹), Bao Zheng (包拯), Han Qi (韓琦), and Ouyang Xiu (歐陽修). He promoted reforms in the imperial examination system and administrative institutions which, despite frequent opposition from conservative factions, laid the foundation for the subsequent Xining Reforms (Xining Bianfa 熙寧變法). Renowned for his leniency and benevolence, Renzong was tolerant of his subordinates and receptive to remonstrance; although factional struggles emerged under his rule, the overall political situation remained stable. During his tenure, he personally adjudicated numerous miscarriages of justice and advocated for Confucianism and frugality. In foreign policy, he maintained peace treaties with the Liao (遼) and Western Xia (西夏) dynasties, opting to secure frontier stability through the payment of annual subsidies rather than large-scale warfare, thereby establishing the steady geopolitical landscape of the mid-Northern Song.
The monetary system of the Song Dynasties was remarkably complex. Officially circulated currency utilised both copper and iron as primary metallic media, which functioned alongside paper currency. Concurrently, silver gradually assumed a position of significant importance. Copper coins were issued in denominations ranging from a value of one to ten. Various circuits (lu 路) minted coins according to local demand; some regions utilised only copper, some only iron, and others a bimetallic combination. The calligraphic styles employed on these coins were diverse, encompassing regular, clerical, seal, and slender gold scripts. The simultaneous issuance of coinage in multiple calligraphic styles originated with the Chunhua Yuanbao (淳化元寶) under Emperor Taizong (宋太宗). However, the introduction of matched sets—series of coins with identical dimensions and designs but rendered in different calligraphic scripts—largely commenced with the Tiansheng Yuanbao (天聖元寶) during the reign of Emperor Renzong.