Me Again....China Dollar size Brass.?????Editted...1st youth that wants it's Reply to this message
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1st youth to reply gets it.
What is it?
Date..???
Value.??
Thanks again
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What is it?
Date..???
Value.??
Thanks again
0
Comments
First Year of Chinese Republic
Value???
Obscurum per obscurius
World Coin & PM Collector
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I have a 20 cash that it would go well with if noone else puts a claim on it.
World Coin & PM Collector
My Coin Info Pages <> My All Experts Profile
Obscurum per obscurius
Anyhow Shiroh, my Beautiful Bride disagrees with you again.
The only "numbers" I saw were the "Gan" date and what I thought was a four, which she tells me is actually read in this instance as the first syllable of the Szechuan provincial name. Neither of us could find a 5 anywhere on the picture, and I'm convinced that it's a 10 cash, either Y#447a (if it's really brass as Smittys suspects) or Y#447 (if it's copper, as the legend states).
It has the required two rosettes at 3:00 and 9:00 on the obverse, and the 5 cash of the same design (Y#446 and Y#446a) is described by Krause as "Rare". There was a 5 cash copper with substantial mintage, but it has the widely used crossed flags obverse.
The coins are listed under "Szechuan Province Republic Milled Cash Coinage" and Krause does not mention or explain the Military Government legend. My own guess is that when they were being minted at the birth of the Republic, the Province was under the control of the new Republican military forces rather than a truly Republican elected government. (Not that I'm sure the Republic of China was ever ruled by an honestly elected government.)
BTW Smittys, your bottom picture is the obverse, correctly oriented, and the top is the reverse, which needs to be rotated about 100 degrees to the right, so the three (almost) parallel lines are vertical. The central legend would then correctly read top to bottom, right to left, as "Szechuan Military Government".
Oh yeah - Krause values a brass 1912 Y#447a from 80¢ VG to $5 XF, and the copper one from $1.75 VG to $20 XF.
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That's OK-- she can't be right all the time.
The translation of the first image reads (from top to bottom):
MADE BY MILITARY GOVERNMENT
SZECHUAN COPPER CURRENCY
(literally "treasure manufactured") CURRENCY 5[ ] SEN (or "cash")
The second side reads:
FIRST YEAR OF CHINESE REPUBLIC
The "gan" in "gannen" means "origin." In this case, it means first year. You will notice there is no Meiji 1 nen, Shohwa 1 nen, etc. It is always Meiji gannen, Shohwa gannen, etc.
Obscurum per obscurius
Millertime
Complete Dime Set
Yeah
<< <i>(literally "treasure manufactured") CURRENCY 5[ ] SEN (or "cash") >>
The printout I made in order to turn the picture right side up didn't capture the 5 character at the bottom, but I do see it now.
That raises the question:
is Krause way off base , orhas Smittys given a truly rare coin to Millertime's son, orhave the Hong Kong/Beijing counterfeiters struck once again?
5 cash Y#446/446a is depicted in Krause as approximately 24mm across.<< <i>
<< <i>(literally "treasure manufactured") CURRENCY 5[ ] SEN (or "cash") >>
The printout I made in order to turn the picture right side up didn't capture the 5 character at the bottom, but I do see it now.
That raises the question:
is Krause way off base , orhas Smittys given a truly rare coin to Millertime's son, orhave the Hong Kong/Beijing counterfeiters struck once again?
5 cash Y#446/446a is depicted in Krause as approximately 24mm across. >>The "juu" in "gojuu" is worn off, so Krause is still OK.
Obscurum per obscurius
<< <i>has Smittys given a truly rare coin to Millertime's son >>
<< <i>The "juu" in "gojuu" is worn off, so Krause is still OK. >>
Ah, so deshoo.
50 cash, KM#449 (copper) $2 VG or KM#449a (brass) $1.50 VG.
Anyhow, the "sen" (qian) does not refers to the currency unit but to money in general.
"Standard copper coins made by the the imperial mint in during the Ming and Qing dynasties."
Keep in mind that the ROC had only just been established so the new coinage had to be labelled in terms of the imperial coinage.
So the revised translation is: "Equivalent to 50 wen of standard coinage" where is "standard coinage" is understood to mean the currency minted by the imperial government.
Is it the character for "Han" as in the Han Dynasty?
Obscurum per obscurius
Congratulations to the winner. It looks really
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