Logo Title
obverse
reverse
PCGS
Context
Year: 1899
Country: China Country flag
Ruler: Guangxu
Currency:
(1896—1940)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 56,000
Material
Diameter: 33 mm
Weight: 13.3 g
Silver weight: 11.44 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 86% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard72
Numista: #34870
Value
Bullion value: $32.19

Obverse

Description:
Four Chinese ideograms read vertically, right to left, with Manchu characters in the center, encircled by more ideograms.
Inscription:
造洋北



ᠪᠠᡩᠠᡵᠠᠩᡤᠠ

寶 ᠶᡠᠸᠠᠨ ᠪᠣᠣ 元

ᡩᠣᡵᠣ



分六錢三平庫
Translation:
Made for the Northern Ocean [Region]

Guangxu [reign era]

Badarangga Doro [Manchu for "Guangxu era"]

Yuan Bao [Ingot Currency]

Three Mace and Six Candareens, Treasury Standard
Languages: Manchu, Chinese

Reverse

Description:
Dragon encircling a pearl, surrounded by English text.
Inscription:
25TH YEAR OF KUANG HSU

PEI YANG
Translation:
Twenty-fifth Year of Kuang Hsu

Pei Yang
Script: Latin
Language: Chinese

Edge

Reeded.

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
189956,000

Historical background

In 1899, Chihli Province (roughly modern-day Hebei and Tianjin) was at the epicenter of a severe and complex monetary crisis that reflected the wider collapse of Qing dynasty authority. The province, containing the capital Beijing and the vital treaty port of Tianjin, was saturated with a chaotic mix of currencies. These included imperial silver sycee (measured in taels), Mexican and later Chinese silver dollars, copper cash coins, and, most problematically, a flood of privately issued banknotes (zhuangpiao) from native banks (qianzhuang) and even local shops. The lack of a centralised, trusted currency system created a fragile monetary environment vulnerable to shock.

This fragility was exacerbated by two major factors. First, the aftermath of the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895) had imposed massive indemnity payments on China, draining silver from the economy. Second, a sustained fall in the global price of silver triggered a disastrous divergence between silver and copper. As silver's value rose relative to copper, the exchange rate for copper cash—the everyday currency of the common people—plummeted. This effectively crushed peasants and labourers, who were paid in copper but often paid taxes calculated in silver, leading to widespread destitution and social anger.

By 1899, the situation was reaching a boiling point. The provincial authorities, under Governor-General Yulu, attempted to restore order by banning private banknotes and mandating the use of official copper coinage. However, these measures were largely ineffective due to a lack of public trust in official institutions and the sheer scale of the informal monetary system. This economic distress became a primary tinder for the Boxer uprising, which erupted violently in Shandong and Chihli that same year, as peasants and unemployed transport workers directed their fury at both foreign influences and the failing Qing state that could not guarantee economic stability.

Series: 1899 Chihli Province circulation coins

10 Fen obverse
10 Fen reverse
10 Fen
1899
20 Fen obverse
20 Fen reverse
20 Fen
1899-1905
50 Fen obverse
50 Fen reverse
50 Fen
1899
1 Yuan obverse
1 Yuan reverse
1 Yuan
1899-1908
5 Fen obverse
5 Fen reverse
5 Fen
1899-1900
Legendary