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Ryukyuan mon

The Ryukyuan mon (琉球文, Ryūkyū mon, Okinawan: Ruuchuu mun) was the currency used in the Ryukyu Islands. The Ryukyuan monetary system was based on that of China, like those of many nations in the Sinosphere, with the mon (文) serving as the basic unit, just as with the Japanese mon, Vietnamese văn, and Korean mun. Like Japan had also done for centuries, the Ryukyuans often made use of the already-existing Chinese cash coins when physical currency was needed.

Ryukyuan mon
琉球文 (Chinese)
A Taise Tsūhō (大世通寳), Sekō Tsūhō (世高通寳), Ryūkyū Tsūhō (琉球通寳) 100-mon, and Ryūkyū Tsūhō (琉球通寳) half-shu cash coins
Denominations
Superunit
 496Shu (朱)
 7936Ryō (両)
Demographics
Date of introduction1454
Official user(s) Ryukyu Kingdom
Unofficial user(s) Satsuma Domain
Okinawa Prefecture (until the 1880s)
Valuation
Pegged with Japanese yen = 10,000 mon (from 1879)
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.

In the 14th and 15th centuries, the Kingdoms of Chūzan and Ryukyu produced their own coinage, but eventually transitioned back to Japanese mon and Chinese wén. Regardless of their origin, mon coins remained the de facto currency in the Ryukyu Kingdom throughout history up until 1879, when the kingdom was fully annexed by the Empire of Japan and the currency was officially replaced by the Japanese yen. Even after the introduction of the yen, however, mon coins continued to circulate within Okinawa Prefecture well into the 1880s, as the Ryukyuans were initially unwilling to use Japanese yen coins.

A second category of mon coins associated with the Ryukyu Kingdom are those bearing the name Ryūkyū Tsūhō [ja] (琉球通寳 "Ryukyu Currency"), which were minted by the Satsuma Domain,[1] but were never actually used as regular currency in the Ryukyu Kingdom or Okinawa Prefecture. Instead, they were used as alternatives to the Japanese Tenpō Tsūhō coin and intended to bolster Satsuma's economy with additional coinage.

Ryukyuan Coinage (14-15th century) edit

The first mon coin to be minted in the Ryukyus was the Chūzan Tsūhō [ja] (中山通寳), said to have been cast by the Kingdom of Chūzan sometime during the reign of King Satto (r. 1350–1395), before the unification of the island of Okinawa into the Ryukyu Kingdom in 1429. Only a dozen or so examples of this coin survive, and due to its scarcity, it is uncertain whether it was ever actually circulated.

The first coins minted by the united Ryukyu Kingdom were Taise Tsūhō [ja] (大世通寳) coins, produced in 1454 under King Shō Taikyū.[2] Soon following this were Sekō Tsūhō [ja] (世高通寳) coins, which were first minted in 1461 under the reign of King Shō Toku. Both of these coins were designed by first taking Ming dynasty Yongle Tongbao (永樂通寳) coins, scraping off the characters 永樂, replacing them with either 大世 for Taise Tsūhō or 世高 for Sekō Tsūhō, and then using the result as a mother coin. Because copper shrinks when it cools, the Sekō Tsūhō was smaller than the Chinese Yongle Tongbao. The Sekō Tsūhō was originally cast to make up for a shortage of currency often attributed to reckless politics and high government expenditure, such as the expensive invasion of Kikai Island by King Shō Toku in the 1460s.[3]

After King Shō Toku was overthrown in a coup d'état, the Second Shō Dynasty rose to the throne. Under the dynasty's first king, Shō En (r. 1469–1476), the last coin to be minted by the Ryukyu Kingdom, the Kin'en Yohō [ja] (金圓世寳) was minted in 1470, albeit not in great amounts, as Ming dynasty coinage was more widely used. After this, the Ryukyu Kingdom stopped manufacturing their own mon coins and relied exclusively on imported Japanese mon and Chinese wén as the main currency of exchange.

Below is a summary of the coins minted by the Kingdom of Chūzan and the Ryukyu Kingdom:[4][5]

Inscription Kyūjitai Shinjitai King Dynasty Image
Chūzan Tsūhō 中山通寳 中山通宝 Satto (r. 1350–1395) Satto
Taise Tsūhō 大世通寳 大世通宝 Shō Taikyū (r. 1454–1460) First Shō    
Sekō Tsūhō 世高通寳 世高通宝 Shō Toku (r. 1460–1469) First Shō    
Kin'en Yohō 金圓世寳 金円世宝 Shō En (r. 1469–1476) Second Shō  

Despite the small size of the Ryukyu Kingdom, Taise Tsūhō and Sekō Tsūhō coins are not uncommon,[6] and have been known to be regularly found on the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra due to the international nature of these coins and the success of Ryukyuan maritime trade.[7] Kin'en Yohō coins are considerably less common, and Chūzan Tsūhō coins are incredibly rare.

Aside from the Chūzan Tsūhō coin, which is mentioned in 17th-century records,[6] no official records exist of the production of these Ryukyuan coins, so it is sometimes taken into doubt that these coins were actually produced by the Ryukyu Kingdom.[8]

Ryūkyū Tsūhō (from 1862) edit

Starting in 1862, daimyō Shimazu Nariakira of Satsuma Domain ordered for the production of coinage known as Ryūkyū Tsūhō (琉球通宝, "Ryukyu Currency"). As the name suggests, the coins were ostensibly meant for circulation within the Ryukyu Kingdom, which was a vassal of Satsuma Domain. However, the coins were never actually introduced in the Ryukyu Kingdom, which continued to use Japanese and Chinese cash coins. Instead, the Ryūkyū Tsūhō coins were a means for Satsuma Domain to produce additional currency to combat its government deficit while circumventing the Tokugawa Shogunate's restriction on minting currency like the Tenpō Tsūhō, which could only legally be produced at the Edo Mint. These efforts were successful, and the Ryūkyū Tsūhō entered wide circulation not only in Satsuma, but also in Japan's other provinces soon after their production.[9] In total, around one million ryō worth of Ryukyuan coins were minted from 1862 to 1865.[10][11]

The coins were released in two denominations, the first with a face value of 100 mon (140 ryō), and the second with a face value of 12 of a shu (125 mon, 132 ryō). As these coins were minted in Satsuma Domain, they bear the mark of the katakana character "sa" (サ) stamped on their edge. On the 100-mon coin, this can be found on the left and right (long) edges, while on the half-shu coin, it can be found on the edge just above the character 寳 on the left side of the obverse.[12]

100-Mon Coin edit

 
A 100-mon Ryūkyū Tsūhō coin

The 100-mon Ryūkyū Tsūhō was modeled after the official Japanese Tenpō Tsūhō (天保通寳) coin of the same denomination, being ellipse-shaped and having a square hole in its center. Its obverse has the words Ryūkyū Tsūhō (琉球通寳, "Ryukyu Currency"), and the reverse has tō hyaku (當百, "worth 100 [mon]"). The coin weighed 5 monme and 5 fun (equivalent to 20.6 grams), and it had dimensions of 49 mm by 32 mm.

Like the Tenpō Tsūhō after which it was modeled, it was heavily debased when compared to 1-mon coins, being merely 6 to 7 times as heavy as a typical 1-mon coin. Despite its face value of 100 mon, Satsuma Domain ordered that it would circulate at the value of 124 mon, which made it a profitable coin to manufacture.[9]

Half-Shu Coin edit

 
A half-shu Ryūkyū Tsūhō coin

The half-shu was circular with a square hole in the center. Its obverse has the words Ryūkyū Tsūhō (琉球通寳, "Ryukyu Currency"), and the reverse has han-ju (半朱, "half shu"). The coin weighed approximately 8 monme (30 to 32 grams), and it had a diameter of 1 sun and 4 bu (equivalent to 43 mm).

Like the 100-mon coin, it was heavily debased, being only 10 to 12 times as heavy as a typical 1-mon coin. Having a face value of one shu, it was nominally equivalent to 125 mon, but the Satsuma Domain government ordered for it to circulate at the value of 248 mon.

The shu (朱) is a Japanese unit of measurement used with gold currency, indicating that the Satsuma government was trying to fix the exchange rate between the copper mon coins and gold currency such as the koban. Officially, the value of 12 shu indicated a value of 132 ryō (両), though this conversion rate seems unlikely to have occurred in practice.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ryuukyuuan coins". Luke Roberts at the Department of History - University of California at Santa Barbara. 24 October 2003. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  2. ^ "Taise Tsūhō", (in Japanese) Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia 沖縄コンパクト事典, Ryūkyū Shimpō, 1 March 2003. Access date = 8 June 2017.
  3. ^ 九州歴史資料館 (Kyūshū Historical Museum) 「大世通宝・「世高通宝」は 琉球王国が発行したコイン .] (in Japanese) Retrieved: 9 June 2017.
  4. ^ JUGEMテーマ:地域/ローカル 琉球王国に貨幣はあったのか?琉球王国の通貨 (in Japanese.) Date: 23 April 2013. Retrieved: 9 June 2017.
  5. ^ 琉球王国大世主尚圓王。 金圓世寳[permanent dead link] (in Japanese) Retrieved: 9 June 2017.
  6. ^ a b Cocolog 雑記@史華堂 「中山通宝」について。 (in Japanese) Published: 8 February 2013 Retrieved: 9 June 2017.
  7. ^ (日本銀行), Nippon/Nihon Ginkō (1973). "p. 105". Nihon Ginkou Chousakyoku ed., Zuroku Nihon no kahei, vol.1 (Tokyo: Touyou Keizai Shinpousha, 1973). Tokyo: Nihon Ginkō. Chōsakyoku. / Bank of Japan, Economic Research Department.
  8. ^ The British Museum - Catalogue of the Japanese Coin Collection (pre-Meiji) at the British Museum with special reference to Kutsuki Masatsuna by Shin’ichi Sakuraki, Helen Wang and Peter Kornicki, with Nobuhisa Furuta, Timon Screech, and Joe Cribb. ISBN 978 086159 174 9 ISSN 1747-3640 (© Copyright the Trustees of the British Museum 2010) Retrieved: 11 April 2018.
  9. ^ a b "Ryuukyuuan coins". Luke Roberts at the Department of History - University of California at Santa Barbara. 24 October 2003. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  10. ^ Ryūkyū Tsūhō (in Japanese) Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia, 沖縄コンパクト事典, Ryūkyū Shimpō, 1 March 2003. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  11. ^ Robert Hellyer, Defining Engagement, Harvard University Press (2009), 192.
  12. ^ "Japanese Coins Circulating on Perry's Arrival and Shortly Thereafter in the Ryukyu Kingdom". George C. Baxley (Baxley Stamps). Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  13. ^ (日本銀行), Nippon/Nihon Ginkō (1973). "pp. 319-322". Nihon Ginkou Chousakyoku ed., Zuroku Nihon no kahei, vol.1 (Tokyo: Touyou Keizai Shinpousha, 1973). Tokyo: Nihon Ginkō. Chōsakyoku. / Bank of Japan, Economic Research Department.
Preceded by:
Chinese wén
Reason: Local production.
Currency of the Ryūkyū islands
1454 – 1879
Succeeded by:
Japanese yen
Reason: Annexed by Japan.
Ratio: 10.000 mon = 1 yen

ryukyuan, 琉球文, ryūkyū, okinawan, ruuchuu, currency, used, ryukyu, islands, etary, system, based, that, china, like, those, many, nations, sinosphere, with, serving, basic, unit, just, with, japanese, vietnamese, văn, korean, like, japan, also, done, centuries,. The Ryukyuan mon 琉球文 Ryukyu mon Okinawan Ruuchuu mun was the currency used in the Ryukyu Islands The Ryukyuan monetary system was based on that of China like those of many nations in the Sinosphere with the mon 文 serving as the basic unit just as with the Japanese mon Vietnamese văn and Korean mun Like Japan had also done for centuries the Ryukyuans often made use of the already existing Chinese cash coins when physical currency was needed Ryukyuan mon琉球文 Chinese A Taise Tsuhō 大世通寳 Sekō Tsuhō 世高通寳 Ryukyu Tsuhō 琉球通寳 100 mon and Ryukyu Tsuhō 琉球通寳 half shu cash coinsDenominationsSuperunit 496Shu 朱 7936Ryō 両 DemographicsDate of introduction1454Official user s Ryukyu KingdomUnofficial user s Satsuma Domain Okinawa Prefecture until the 1880s ValuationPegged withJapanese yen 10 000 mon from 1879 This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete In the 14th and 15th centuries the Kingdoms of Chuzan and Ryukyu produced their own coinage but eventually transitioned back to Japanese mon and Chinese wen Regardless of their origin mon coins remained the de facto currency in the Ryukyu Kingdom throughout history up until 1879 when the kingdom was fully annexed by the Empire of Japan and the currency was officially replaced by the Japanese yen Even after the introduction of the yen however mon coins continued to circulate within Okinawa Prefecture well into the 1880s as the Ryukyuans were initially unwilling to use Japanese yen coins A second category of mon coins associated with the Ryukyu Kingdom are those bearing the name Ryukyu Tsuhō ja 琉球通寳 Ryukyu Currency which were minted by the Satsuma Domain 1 but were never actually used as regular currency in the Ryukyu Kingdom or Okinawa Prefecture Instead they were used as alternatives to the Japanese Tenpō Tsuhō coin and intended to bolster Satsuma s economy with additional coinage Contents 1 Ryukyuan Coinage 14 15th century 2 Ryukyu Tsuhō from 1862 2 1 100 Mon Coin 2 2 Half Shu Coin 3 See also 4 ReferencesRyukyuan Coinage 14 15th century editThe first mon coin to be minted in the Ryukyus was the Chuzan Tsuhō ja 中山通寳 said to have been cast by the Kingdom of Chuzan sometime during the reign of King Satto r 1350 1395 before the unification of the island of Okinawa into the Ryukyu Kingdom in 1429 Only a dozen or so examples of this coin survive and due to its scarcity it is uncertain whether it was ever actually circulated The first coins minted by the united Ryukyu Kingdom were Taise Tsuhō ja 大世通寳 coins produced in 1454 under King Shō Taikyu 2 Soon following this were Sekō Tsuhō ja 世高通寳 coins which were first minted in 1461 under the reign of King Shō Toku Both of these coins were designed by first taking Ming dynasty Yongle Tongbao 永樂通寳 coins scraping off the characters 永樂 replacing them with either 大世 for Taise Tsuhō or 世高 for Sekō Tsuhō and then using the result as a mother coin Because copper shrinks when it cools the Sekō Tsuhō was smaller than the Chinese Yongle Tongbao The Sekō Tsuhō was originally cast to make up for a shortage of currency often attributed to reckless politics and high government expenditure such as the expensive invasion of Kikai Island by King Shō Toku in the 1460s 3 After King Shō Toku was overthrown in a coup d etat the Second Shō Dynasty rose to the throne Under the dynasty s first king Shō En r 1469 1476 the last coin to be minted by the Ryukyu Kingdom the Kin en Yohō ja 金圓世寳 was minted in 1470 albeit not in great amounts as Ming dynasty coinage was more widely used After this the Ryukyu Kingdom stopped manufacturing their own mon coins and relied exclusively on imported Japanese mon and Chinese wen as the main currency of exchange Below is a summary of the coins minted by the Kingdom of Chuzan and the Ryukyu Kingdom 4 5 Inscription Kyujitai Shinjitai King Dynasty ImageChuzan Tsuhō 中山通寳 中山通宝 Satto r 1350 1395 SattoTaise Tsuhō 大世通寳 大世通宝 Shō Taikyu r 1454 1460 First Shō nbsp nbsp Sekō Tsuhō 世高通寳 世高通宝 Shō Toku r 1460 1469 First Shō nbsp nbsp Kin en Yohō 金圓世寳 金円世宝 Shō En r 1469 1476 Second Shō nbsp Despite the small size of the Ryukyu Kingdom Taise Tsuhō and Sekō Tsuhō coins are not uncommon 6 and have been known to be regularly found on the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra due to the international nature of these coins and the success of Ryukyuan maritime trade 7 Kin en Yohō coins are considerably less common and Chuzan Tsuhō coins are incredibly rare Aside from the Chuzan Tsuhō coin which is mentioned in 17th century records 6 no official records exist of the production of these Ryukyuan coins so it is sometimes taken into doubt that these coins were actually produced by the Ryukyu Kingdom 8 Ryukyu Tsuhō from 1862 editStarting in 1862 daimyō Shimazu Nariakira of Satsuma Domain ordered for the production of coinage known as Ryukyu Tsuhō 琉球通宝 Ryukyu Currency As the name suggests the coins were ostensibly meant for circulation within the Ryukyu Kingdom which was a vassal of Satsuma Domain However the coins were never actually introduced in the Ryukyu Kingdom which continued to use Japanese and Chinese cash coins Instead the Ryukyu Tsuhō coins were a means for Satsuma Domain to produce additional currency to combat its government deficit while circumventing the Tokugawa Shogunate s restriction on minting currency like the Tenpō Tsuhō which could only legally be produced at the Edo Mint These efforts were successful and the Ryukyu Tsuhō entered wide circulation not only in Satsuma but also in Japan s other provinces soon after their production 9 In total around one million ryō worth of Ryukyuan coins were minted from 1862 to 1865 10 11 The coins were released in two denominations the first with a face value of 100 mon 1 40 ryō and the second with a face value of 1 2 of a shu 125 mon 1 32 ryō As these coins were minted in Satsuma Domain they bear the mark of the katakana character sa サ stamped on their edge On the 100 mon coin this can be found on the left and right long edges while on the half shu coin it can be found on the edge just above the character 寳 hō on the left side of the obverse 12 100 Mon Coin edit See also Tenpō Tsuhō nbsp A 100 mon Ryukyu Tsuhō coinThe 100 mon Ryukyu Tsuhō was modeled after the official Japanese Tenpō Tsuhō 天保通寳 coin of the same denomination being ellipse shaped and having a square hole in its center Its obverse has the words Ryukyu Tsuhō 琉球通寳 Ryukyu Currency and the reverse has tō hyaku 當百 worth 100 mon The coin weighed 5 monme and 5 fun equivalent to 20 6 grams and it had dimensions of 49 mm by 32 mm Like the Tenpō Tsuhō after which it was modeled it was heavily debased when compared to 1 mon coins being merely 6 to 7 times as heavy as a typical 1 mon coin Despite its face value of 100 mon Satsuma Domain ordered that it would circulate at the value of 124 mon which made it a profitable coin to manufacture 9 Half Shu Coin edit nbsp A half shu Ryukyu Tsuhō coinThe half shu was circular with a square hole in the center Its obverse has the words Ryukyu Tsuhō 琉球通寳 Ryukyu Currency and the reverse has han ju 半朱 half shu The coin weighed approximately 8 monme 30 to 32 grams and it had a diameter of 1 sun and 4 bu equivalent to 43 mm Like the 100 mon coin it was heavily debased being only 10 to 12 times as heavy as a typical 1 mon coin Having a face value of one shu it was nominally equivalent to 125 mon but the Satsuma Domain government ordered for it to circulate at the value of 248 mon The shu 朱 is a Japanese unit of measurement used with gold currency indicating that the Satsuma government was trying to fix the exchange rate between the copper mon coins and gold currency such as the koban Officially the value of 1 2 shu indicated a value of 1 32 ryō 両 though this conversion rate seems unlikely to have occurred in practice 13 See also edit nbsp Japan portal nbsp Money portal nbsp Numismatics portalB yen Tokugawa coinage Japanese currencyReferences edit Ryuukyuuan coins Luke Roberts at the Department of History University of California at Santa Barbara 24 October 2003 Retrieved 1 June 2017 Taise Tsuhō in Japanese Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia 沖縄コンパクト事典 Ryukyu Shimpō 1 March 2003 Access date 8 June 2017 九州歴史資料館 Kyushu Historical Museum 大世通宝 世高通宝 は 琉球王国が発行したコイン in Japanese Retrieved 9 June 2017 JUGEMテーマ 地域 ローカル 琉球王国に貨幣はあったのか 琉球王国の通貨 in Japanese Date 23 April 2013 Retrieved 9 June 2017 琉球王国大世主尚圓王 金圓世寳 permanent dead link in Japanese Retrieved 9 June 2017 a b Cocolog 雑記 史華堂 中山通宝 について in Japanese Published 8 February 2013 Retrieved 9 June 2017 日本銀行 Nippon Nihon Ginkō 1973 p 105 Nihon Ginkou Chousakyoku ed Zuroku Nihon no kahei vol 1 Tokyo Touyou Keizai Shinpousha 1973 Tokyo Nihon Ginkō Chōsakyoku Bank of Japan Economic Research Department The British Museum Catalogue of the Japanese Coin Collection pre Meiji at the British Museum with special reference to Kutsuki Masatsuna by Shin ichi Sakuraki Helen Wang and Peter Kornicki with Nobuhisa Furuta Timon Screech and Joe Cribb ISBN 978 086159 174 9 ISSN 1747 3640 c Copyright the Trustees of the British Museum 2010 Retrieved 11 April 2018 a b Ryuukyuuan coins Luke Roberts at the Department of History University of California at Santa Barbara 24 October 2003 Retrieved 28 December 2021 Ryukyu Tsuhō in Japanese Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia 沖縄コンパクト事典 Ryukyu Shimpō 1 March 2003 Retrieved 8 June 2017 Robert Hellyer Defining Engagement Harvard University Press 2009 192 Japanese Coins Circulating on Perry s Arrival and Shortly Thereafter in the Ryukyu Kingdom George C Baxley Baxley Stamps Retrieved 1 June 2017 日本銀行 Nippon Nihon Ginkō 1973 pp 319 322 Nihon Ginkou Chousakyoku ed Zuroku Nihon no kahei vol 1 Tokyo Touyou Keizai Shinpousha 1973 Tokyo Nihon Ginkō Chōsakyoku Bank of Japan Economic Research Department nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coins of the Ryukyu Kingdom Preceded by Chinese wenReason Local production Currency of the Ryukyu islands 1454 1879 Succeeded by Japanese yenReason Annexed by Japan Ratio 10 000 mon 1 yen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ryukyuan mon amp oldid 1189419924 History, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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