Logo Title
Context
Years: 1902–1906
Country: China Country flag
Ruler: Guangxu
Currency:
(1897—1949)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 28 mm
Weight: 7.41 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard38b
Numista: #275613

Obverse

Description:
Four Chinese characters read vertically, centered on a flower, with more characters above and below and Manchu text on the sides.
Inscription:
造省徽安

ᠪᠣᠣ ᠠᠨ



寶元



十當
Translation:
Made by Board of Revenue, Anqing Mint.

Guangxu

Treasure

Ten Cash
Languages: Manchu, Chinese

Reverse

Description:
Dragon encircling a pearl, English legend above.
Inscription:
AN-HWEI

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection

Historical background

In 1902, Anhwei (modern Anhui) Province, like much of late Qing China, operated within a complex and chaotic multi-currency system. The primary medium for large transactions and tax payments remained the silver tael, a unit of weight rather than a coin, leading to inconsistencies as every major city and trade guild had its own standard. The province dealt with a proliferation of silver sycees (shoes or ingots), foreign silver dollars (primarily Mexican and later British trade dollars), and a vast array of copper cash coins for daily retail. This fragmentation created significant friction in commerce, as constant assay and exchange between formats were required, benefiting money-changers and corrupt officials while burdening merchants and peasants.

The period was marked by a severe shortage of standardized small-denomination currency, particularly copper cash. This scarcity was exacerbated by the Boxer Indemnity payments imposed after 1901, which drained silver from the provincial economy, and by the hoarding and melting of copper coins. In response, provincial authorities and even local merchants increasingly issued their own unofficial cash tokens and privately minted copper coins to facilitate local trade, further decentralizing monetary authority. Meanwhile, the imperial government’s attempts at reform, such as promoting the new imperial silver dollar and copper coinage from the Tianjin Mint, had limited and uneven penetration in Anhwei’s inland markets.

Consequently, Anhwei in 1902 exemplified the fiscal weakness of the Qing state. The currency situation was a patchwork of imperial, provincial, private, and foreign monies, leading to exchange rate volatility and widespread counterfeiting. This monetary disarray stifled economic integration within the province, complicated tax collection, and reflected the broader dynastic decline, where central control was eroding in the face of local necessity and foreign economic pressure. It set the stage for the more aggressive provincial minting and banking experiments that would follow in the decade before the 1911 Revolution.

Series: 1902 Anhwei Province circulation coins

10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1902
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1902
5 Cash obverse
5 Cash reverse
5 Cash
1902
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1902-1906
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1902-1906
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1902-1906
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1902-1906
Legendary