Logo Title
Context
Year: 1912
Country: China Country flag
Period:
Currency:
(1897—1949)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 28 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard399.5
Numista: #296829

Obverse

Description:
Four Chinese ideograms arranged vertically around a central flower, surrounded by additional characters.
Inscription:
國民華中



元 銅



十當
Translation:
CENTRAL CHINA

LAKE

TEN CASH COIN

SOUTH
Language: Chinese

Reverse

Description:
Rice plant with five ears and a ribbon, encircled by English text.
Inscription:
THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA

TEN CASH

Edge

Plain

Categories

Plants> Flower

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1912

Historical background

In 1912, Hunan Province, like much of China, was in a state of profound monetary disarray following the collapse of the Qing Dynasty and the declaration of the Republic. The traditional system, based on silver sycee (shoe-shaped ingots weighed in taels) and copper-alloy cash coins, had fragmented. Provincial mints, including the one in Changsha, operated with little central oversight, producing coins of inconsistent weight and purity. Crucially, a flood of debased copper "small cash" (xiaopingqian) and privately issued merchant scrip (qianpiao) circulated to fill the gap, leading to severe local inflation and eroding public trust in the monetary system.

The new Republican government in Nanjing, and later Beijing, aimed to impose unity by promulgating the "Yuan Dollar" (Yuan Dayang) as the national silver standard. However, Hunan's economy struggled to adapt. While some new Yuan coins were minted, they competed with a chaotic mix of old Qing dragon dollars, foreign silver (especially Mexican and British trade dollars), and the persistent tidal wave of private notes and inferior copper coins. The provincial authority, financially strained and politically unstable, lacked the power to recall or regulate this heterogeneous media of exchange, leaving commerce to rely on a cumbersome system of daily exchange rates between different forms of money.

This currency anarchy was both a symptom and a cause of Hunan's broader crisis. It hampered trade, complicated tax collection for the new government, and exacerbated social unrest. The instability provided fertile ground for local militarists to assert control, often by seizing mint revenues or issuing their own military scrip. Thus, in 1912, Hunan’s monetary landscape was not one of unified reform but a contested and transitional space, reflecting the province’s precarious position between a defunct imperial order and a not-yet-functional republican one.

Series: 1912 Hunan Province circulation coins

10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1912
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1912
10 Cash obverse
10 Cash reverse
10 Cash
1912
Legendary