Jump to content

File:Eiraku Tsūhō (永樂通寶) - Dr. Luke Roberts 06.png

Page contents not supported in other languages.
This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eiraku_Tsūhō_(永樂通寶)_-_Dr._Luke_Roberts_06.png (150 × 148 pixels, file size: 48 KB, MIME type: image/png)

Summary

Description
English: Iutsushi 鋳写し

Iutsushi means to "cast a copy from," This refers to casting a coin from a circulating coin. In Japan during the medieval period up into the early 1600s Chinese coins, mainly Song and Ming, were imported in great quantities and were the common currency in Japan. People in Japan frequently cast more coins from these circulating coins. Because circulating coins are less crisp than mother coins and also smaller due to shrinkage in the metal when it cools, iutsushi coins are smaller and the character quality overall is softer and more blurry. Nevertheless, it is very difficult to judge whether a coin is merely a worn down Chinese coin (each of which comes in a variety of sizes, script styles and metal content), a Japanese bitasen, a Chinese private counterfeit, a Vietnamese copy.... This is where the collecting and identification get very tough. What I present below is the best I can do at the moment but may contain some inaccuracies. Basically you look for smaller size, differing metal content and casting quality, and frequently a nearly smooth reverse. But metal content varies in even the standard mints, worn coins get smooth backs and soft characters etc... Eiraku Tsuuhou This coin may just be a normal Chinese Yong Le Tong Bao. However the copper color is more common in Japan and there is a certain softness to the edges and blending to the inner rim that suggest it may be a high quality iutsushi.

24 mm x 1 mm
Date
Source Bitasen (University of California at Santa Barbara).
Author Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts

Licensing

This file comes from the collection of Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts and is copyrighted.
Note: This permission only extends to the texts and photos of coins which are in the public domain at this link and its subpages, with the exception of the page The Manufacture of Cash Coins. It does not include any other content from www.history.ucsb.edu.
© The copyright holder of this file, Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts, allows anyone to use it for any purpose, provided that the copyright holder is properly attributed. Redistribution, derivative work, commercial use, and all other use is permitted.
Attribution:
Dr. Luke Shepherd Roberts, available from http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/roberts/coins/index.html.

VRT Wikimedia

This work is free and may be used by anyone for any purpose. If you wish to use this content, you do not need to request permission as long as you follow any licensing requirements mentioned on this page.

The Wikimedia Foundation has received an e-mail confirming that the copyright holder has approved publication under the terms mentioned on this page. This correspondence has been reviewed by a Volunteer Response Team (VRT) member and stored in our permission archive. The correspondence is available to trusted volunteers as ticket #2018032110011865.

If you have questions about the archived correspondence, please use the VRT noticeboard. Ticket link: https://ticket.wikimedia.org/otrs/index.pl?Action=AgentTicketZoom&TicketNumber=2018032110011865
Find other files from the same ticket: SDC query (SPARQL)

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

21 May 2018

image/png

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current22:00, 21 May 2018Thumbnail for version as of 22:00, 21 May 2018150 × 148 (48 KB)Donald TrungUser created page with UploadWizard

The following page uses this file: