Logo Title
obverse
reverse
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Context
Year: 1753
Country: Korea
Issuer: Joseon
Ruler: Yeongjo
Currency:
(1392—1892)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 33 mm
Weight: 5.08 g
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
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Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard409
Numista: #367661

Obverse

Description:
常平通寶 (Sang pyong Tong bo) - Yi Dynasty Korean currency.
Inscription:


寶 通

 平

Reverse

Description:
Mint mark above, crescent right. *禁 (Kum): Court Guard "Nae" series.
Inscription:


  (

 來

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Court Guard Military Unit

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1753

Historical background

In 1753, the currency situation in Joseon was defined by a state of severe instability and economic strain, primarily driven by the chronic debasement of the yeopjeon (葉錢), the standard brass coin. Since its widespread introduction in the 17th century, the government had repeatedly issued new coinages with reduced copper content to generate seigniorage revenue, leading to rampant inflation. The value of the coinage plummeted, while market prices, particularly for rice and cloth—the other key mediums of exchange—soared. This created a profound loss of public trust in the monetary system, with merchants and citizens alike preferring tangible goods over the increasingly worthless brass coins.

The root causes of this crisis were multifaceted. Financially, the state treasury was perpetually depleted due to the costs of military preparedness, royal court expenditures, and a rigid tax system based largely on grain, which was insufficient for a commercializing economy. Socially, the circulation of privately minted counterfeit coins, often of even poorer quality than the official issues, exacerbated the problem. The Samsu (三手) system, which allowed tax payments in coin, cloth, or grain, became dysfunctional as the official exchange rates failed to keep pace with market realities, causing further confusion and arbitrage.

King Yeongjo (r. 1724-1776), aware of the corrosive effects of this monetary chaos on both the economy and state authority, was actively seeking solutions. The year 1753 fell within a period of his reform efforts, which included attempts to recall old coinage and mint new, standardized sangpyeong tongbo (常平通寶) coins. However, these measures faced significant implementation challenges, including resistance from corrupt officials and powerful merchants who profited from the unstable system. Thus, the currency situation of 1753 represented a critical and unresolved tension between a deteriorating old order and the king's persistent, but not yet successful, drive for monetary stabilization.

Series: 1753 Joseon circulation coins

2 Mun obverse
2 Mun reverse
2 Mun
1753
2 Mun obverse
2 Mun reverse
2 Mun
1753
2 Mun obverse
2 Mun reverse
2 Mun
1753
2 Mun obverse
2 Mun reverse
2 Mun
1753
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