Fortune Telling Collection - Ziwei fortune-telling - What kinds of copper coins are there in Shunzhi Bao Tong?

What kinds of copper coins are there in Shunzhi Bao Tong?

1. Shunzhi III, also known as Shunzhi "Yi Li", is the third kind of Shunzhi Qianzhu after Shunzhi I and II. In the tenth year of Shunzhi (1653), in July, the provincial and town money bureaus stopped casting single-character banknotes, and began casting one cent and ten cents back from Shunzhi. Each article weighs one point, two points and five points, which is more accurate than memorizing single-word notes. The characters on the back are composed of Chinese characters in the right province and "Yi Fen" in the left province. Because the word "one mile" means one mile of silver (quasi-silver 1000 miles), it can be directly exchanged with official silver, so it is called "counting silver one mile". How to make money by speculating in gold experts will guide banks to open accounts in gold and silver TD for free. Bank gold and silver simulation trading software sets up desktop quotation tools. According to historical records, there are nineteen bureaus in Shunzhi * * *, namely: household, industry, thistle, propaganda, cloud (Miyun Bureau), east, pro, primitive, yang, Shaanxi, Tong and He. The layout of each bureau is basically fixed, with little change. Except for Yili, Zheyili, Ningyili, Changyili, Jiangyili, Fuyili, Yunyili and other Southern Bureaus, most other bureaus adopt the standard calligraphy system of user currency.

Second, Shunzhi style, also known as Shunzhi antique style (imitation money style), is the earliest of Shunzhi five styles. It was first cast in the first year of Shunzhi (1644). After the Qing army occupied Beijing, the Qing Dynasty was established. At the same time, a large number of old institutions, craftsmen and coin-making techniques left over from the Ming Dynasty were used in currency issuance. Therefore, the coins of "Shunzhi Bao Tong" minted in this period largely retained the style of Ming Dynasty coins, and the inscription "Shunzhi Bao Tong" was bare-backed. This form is mainly to meet the needs of the people in the customs and facilitate the exchange of old and new money.