Yansheng Coin

Yansheng Coin (simplified Chinese: 厌胜钱; traditional Chinese: 厭勝錢; pinyin: yàn shèng qián), is a kind of special coin used mainly for ritual uses. It was very popular in ancient China and even the Republic of China era. Normally these coins are privately funded or cast, such as by a rich family for their own family ceremony.

It's not a real kind of currency, and cannot be circulated in market.

The collection (e.g. antique collection, coin collection) of this kind of coins has a long history, and has been very popular since the Western Han Dynasty. Normally this kind of coins are heavily decorated, have complicated patterns, and even engraved.[1]

Names

Its formal name and pronunciation would be Yasheng coin/money (simplified Chinese: 压胜钱; traditional Chinese: 押胜钱; pinyin: yā shèng qián), but nowadays Yansheng is more widely known.

In Shuowen Jiezi, it records: "厌,笮也,今人作压。"[2] ("(厌), bamboo ritual ware, nowadays (Western Han Dynasty period) people use as Yā (压)), which would imply the original meaning of Yasheng is for terrifying ghosts away and praying for victory.[3]

Sometimes, the nickname for Yansheng coin also includes so-called "flower coin" or "patterned coin" (simplified Chinese: 花钱; traditional Chinese: 花錢; pinyin: huā qián).

History and usage

Yansheng coins were first appeared during the Western Han Dynasty. It was mainly originated from necromancy, for propitious wishes, terrifying ghosts, lucky money, or even for praying the victory of a war.

In Ming and Qing Dynasties, the imperial government also issued such coins, such as for big festivals or ceremonies like the emperor's birthday.

Categories

A Yansheng coin of Chinese characters 福 (left) and 壽 (right) repeated in various scripts. Qing Dynasty antique

This kind of coins has several different styles:

External links

References

  1. Baidu.com Encyclopaedia: Yansheng Coin (厌胜钱)
  2. "笮" in pinyin is or zuó. appeared earlier, and original meant "bamboo ware to contain arrows", so it's a military ware (for war and hunting). Zuó came later, which means "rope made of bamboo rips".
  3. Shuowen Jiezi (a Chinese dictionary of Western Han Dynasty), by Xu Shen


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