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  2. List of Japanese coinage patterns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_coinage...

    These pattern coins were never issued for circulation, though some privately made ones circulated unofficially. The following is a list of Japanese pattern coins from the yen based currency system started under the Meiji Restoration. [1] The first patterns of the yen based system were made from 1869 to 1870 as presentation pieces to the Emperor.

  3. List of Japanese cash coins by inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_cash...

    [6] [7] After the Tokugawa shogunate banned Bitasen in 1608 they started producing their own coinage and after 1859 provincial authorities were allowed to mint their own coinages. Japanese cash coins were officially demonetised in 1891 after officially circulating as a division of the Japanese yen with an exchange rate of 10.000 mon for 1 yen ...

  4. 1 yen coin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1_yen_coin

    Japanese coinage was reformed in 1948 with the issue of a brass one-yen coin. 451,170,000 coins were minted until production stopped in 1950. [18] The obverse of these brass coins features a numeral "1" with "State of Japan" above, and the date below, while the reverse reads "One Yen" with a floral pattern below it. [ 18 ]

  5. Mannen Tsūhō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannen_Tsūhō

    Mannen Tsūhō (万年通宝 aka 萬年通宝) is an early form of Japanese currency that was issued from 760 to 765 AD (Tenpyō-hōji 4 to 9) during the Nara period. These are also known as the second issue of Kocho Junisen under the Ritsuryo system .

  6. Coinage shapes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coinage_shapes

    The Tenpō Tsūhō, a Japanese coin from the 19th-century. Although the vast majority of coins are round, coins are made in a variety of other shapes, including squares, diamonds, hexagons, heptagons, octagons, decagons, and dodecagons. They have also been struck with scalloped (wavy) edges, and with holes in the middle.

  7. Japanese currency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_currency

    The first Japanese embassy to China is recorded to have been sent in 630. [1] The importance of metallic currency appeared to Japanese nobles, probably leading to some coin minting at the end of the 7th century, [3] such as the Fuhonsen coinage (富本銭), discovered in 1998 through archaeological research in Nara Prefecture. [1]

  8. Japanese mon (currency) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_mon_(currency)

    Due to the missing small coinage, the Japanese posts issued their first stamps (Meiji 4.3.1 / 1871.4.20) in mon and fixed postal rates in mon until April 1872 (Meiji 5.2.28). [2] During the co-existence of the mon with the sen between 1870 and 1891, the metal content of the old currency became important.

  9. Wadōkaichin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wadōkaichin

    The Chinese Kāiyuán Tōngbǎo coin (開元通寶), first minted in 621 CE in Chang'an, was the model for the Japanese wadōkaichin. Wadōkaichin ( 和同開珎 ) , also romanized as Wadō-kaichin or called Wadō-kaihō , is the oldest official Japanese coinage , first mentioned for 29 August 708 [ 1 ] on order of Empress Genmei .