The Vietnamese cash (chữ Hán: ; chữ Nôm: ; ), also called the sapek or sapèque, is a cast round coin with a square hole that was an official currency of Vietnam from the ÃÂinh dynasty in 970 until the Nguyá» n dynasty in 1945, and remained in circulation in North Vietnam until 1948. The same type of currency circulated in China, Japan, Korea, and Ryà «kyà « for centuries. Though the majority of Vietnamese cash coins throughout history were copper coins, lead, iron (from 1528) and zinc (from 1740) coins also circulated alongside them often at fluctuating rates (with 1 copper cash being worth 10 zinc cash in 1882). Coins made from metals of lower intrinsic value were introduced because of various superstitions involving Vietnamese people burying cash coins, as the problem of people burying cash coins became too much for the government. Almost all coins issued by government mints tended to be buried mere months after they had entered circulation. The Vietnamese government began issuing coins made from an alloy of zinc, lead, and tin. As these cash coins tended to be very fragile, they would decompose faster if buried, which caused the Vietnamese people to stop burying their coins.
The inscriptions of Vietnamese cash coins can be written in either the Viết chéo (æÂ°æ¹¥ / æÂ°è¢Â, top-bottom-right-left) style or the Viết thuáºÂn (æÂ°é Â, clockwise, top-right-bottom-left) style.
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The French term for cash coins, , comes from the Malay terms or meaning 'one pe(k)' (, or pie, being a kind of currency), which in turn come from the Chinese word / (, Vietnamese reading: ) meaning 'one-hundred'. The origin of the term might have come from the fact that cash coins were typically strung together in strings of around a hundred pieces.
The French adopted the term in Macau and initially used it to refer to Chinese cash coins but later also applied the term for Vietnamese cash coins.
In the late 19th century slang spoken by the lower-class people of Saigon the term was used to refer to cash coins; this term was an abbreviation of ().
Traditionally, the basic units of Vietnamese currency were quan (, ), tiá»Ân, and ÃÂá»Âng. One was 10 , and one was between 50 and 100 , depending on the time period. From the reign of Emperor Trần Thái Tông onward, 1 was 69 in ordinary commercial transactions but 1 was 70 for official transactions. From the reign of Emperor Lê Lợi, 1 was decreed to be 50 . During the Northern and Southern dynasties of Vietnam period, beginning in 1528, coins were reduced from to in diameter and diluted with zinc and iron. The smaller coinage was called or , in contrast to the larger (literally, 'valuable cash') or . One was equivalent to 600 , while 1 was only 360 . During the Later Lê dynasty, 1 was 60 ; therefore, 600 was 1 . During the Yuan dynasty, Vietnamese traders at the border with China used the rate 1 to 67 . Zinc coins began to appear in Dai Viet during the 18th century. One copper () coin was worth 3 zinc () coins. Beginning with the reign of Emperor Gia Long, both copper and zinc coins were in use. Originally the two coins had equal value, but eventually a copper coin rose to double the worth of a zinc coin, then triple, then sixfold, until the reign of Emperor Thành Thái, it was worth ten times a zinc coin.
During the Bắc thuá»Âc a number of Chinese currencies circulated in Vietnam, during this period precious metals like gold and silver were also used in commercial transactions but it wasn't until Vietnamese independence that the first natively produced cash coins would appear. The cash coins produced in Vietnam typically carried the era name of the period it was produced in.
The first Vietnamese coins were cast under the rule of the ÃÂinh dynasty (968âÂÂ981) with the introduction of the Thái Bình Hðng Bảo () under ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh. Likewise the only inscription cast during the Early Lê dynasty period bore the inscription Thiên Phúc Trấn Bảo (天ç¦Âé®寶). However, for the next two centuries coins would remain a rarity in the daily lives of the common people, as bartering would remain the dominant means of exchange under both the ÃÂinh and Early Lê dynasties.
The first cash coins of the Lý dynasty produced during the reign of Emperor Lý Thái TỠwere the (), these were among the largest early Vietnamese cash coins with a diameter of 25.5 millimeters. All known variants of this cash coin feature the Chinese character () on the top of their reverse sides.
Generally cast coins produced by the Vietnamese from the reign of Lý Thái Tông and onwards were of diminutive quality compared to the Chinese variants. They were often produced with inferior metallic compositions and made to be thinner and lighter than the Chinese due to a severe lack of copper that existed during the Lý dynasty. This inspired Chinese traders to recast Chinese coins for export to Vietnam, which caused an abundance of coinage to circulate in the country, prompting the Lý government to suspend the mintage of coins for five decades.
The production of inferior coinage continued under the Trần dynasty. The production of both government and private cash coins happened at a large scale during the Trần period.
It was under the reign of emperor Trần Dụ Tông that the most cash coins were cast of this period; this was because of several calamities such as failed crops that plagued the country during his reign, which caused the Trần government to issue more coins to the populace as compensation. The internal political struggles of the Trần dynasty ensured the cessation of the production of coinage, and as such, no coins were produced during the entire reigns of the last seven monarchs of the Trần dynasty.
After the reign of emperor Trần Nghá» Tông the government of ÃÂại Viá»Ât buried large reserves of cash coins in a mountain, the place of storage in this mountain later collapsed which became a contributing factor to cash coins remaining scarce after the Trần dynasty period.
During the Há» dynasty the usage of coins was banned by Há» Quý Ly in 1396 in favour of the () banknote series and ordered people to exchange their coinage for these banknotes (with an exchange rate of one of copper coins for two banknotes). Those who refused to exchange or continued to pay with coins would be executed and have their possessions taken by the government. Despite these harsh laws, very few people actually preferred paper money and coins remained widespread in circulation, forcing the Há» dynasty to retract their policies. The banknotes of the Há» dynasty featured designs with auspicious clouds (one ), turtles (two ), Kỳ lân (three ), Phðợng hoàng (five ), and dragons (one ).
Under the HỠdynasty cash coins with the inscriptions () and () were introduced, but they would only be manufactured in small numbers, though the Later Lê dynasty would produce coins with the same inscriptions less than half a century later in larger quantities.
After Lê Thái Tá» came to power in 1428 by ousting out the Ming dynasty ending the Fourth Chinese domination of Vietnam, the ÃÂại Viá»Ât sá» ký toàn thð reports that in 1429 it was proposed to reintroduce paper money, but this idea was rejected. Lê Thái Tá» enacted new policies to improve the quality of the manufacturing of coinage leading to the production of coins with both excellent craftsmanship and metal compositions that rivaled that of the best contemporary Chinese coinage. After ascending the throne, Lê Thái Tá» immediately summoned the great officials in the court to discuss the production of money and issued a Chiếu which stated that: "Money is an extremely necessary thing, like the lifeblood of the people, indispensable. Our country minted a few coins, but the copper coins were destroyed a lot by the Ming people, only about one percent remained. Now the domestic consumption is in short supply, in order for the currency to circulate in abundance, to please the people, it is necessary to have a reasonable monetary regulation. So it is impossible not to discuss soon, I will consider implementing." After that, the ThuáºÂn Thiên Nguyên Bảo (é Â天å Â寶) was minted, according to the regulations, 50 ÃÂá»Âng is 1 tiá»Ân.
The Mạc dynasty, which usurped power between the years 1528 to 1592, also minted its own coinage but they began to use zinc and iron, which were cheaper metals, and they further allowed private coinage to develop which decreased the quality of the coinage. After the Lê dynasty returned to power they tried to combat these monetary practices, but the shortage of copper (as the mines where the copper came from were mostly in areas controlled by China) and the division of the country between the two rival lordships (or principalities) of the Trá»Ânh and Nguyá» n lords made these measures ineffective.
Between 1633 and 1637 the Dutch East India Company sold 105,835 strings of 960 cash coins (or 101,600,640 ) to the Nguyá» n lords in Vénh Lạc Thông Bảo (), and Khoan Vénh Thông Bảo () coins. This was because the Japanese had restricted trade, forcing the Southern Vietnamese traders to purchase their copper coins from the Dutch Republic rather than from Japanese merchants as before. This trade lead to a surplus of copper in the territory of the Nguyá» n lords, allowing them to use the metal (which at the time was scarce in the north) for more practical applications such as nails and door hinges. After this, Nagasaki trade coins, which were specifically minted for the Vietnamese market, also started being traded and circulating in the northern parts of Vietnam where the smaller coins would often be melted down for utensils and only circulated in Hanoi, while larger Nagasaki trade coins circulated all over Vietnam.
From the Dðáng Hòa era (1635âÂÂ1643) under Lê Thần Tông until 1675 no coins were cast due to the political turmoil. At the turn of the 18th century Lê Dụ Tông opened a number of copper mines and renewed the production of high quality coinage. During the (, 1706âÂÂ1719) period of Lê Dụ Tông the first large-format cash coins were issued; they had a diameter of 50.5 mm and a weight of 33.13 grams.
According to the ÃÂại Nam thá»±c lục tiá»Ân biên from the reign of Túc Tông (lord Nguyá» n Phúc Chú) the Nguyá» n lords started producing copper cash coins. And later during the reign of the Thế tông Hiếu và © Hoàng ÃÂế (lord Nguyá» n Phúc Khoát) the Nguyá» n lords started minting white zinc coins, they opened a mint at Lðáng Quán, where they minted cash coins in the form of the Tðá»Âng Phù cash coins of the Song dynasty. According to their regulations it was strictly forbidden to mint privately. After minting more money, they produced the Thiên Minh Thông Bảo cash coins.
From 1719 the production of cast copper coins ceased for two decades and taxes were more heavily lifted on the Chinese population as Mandarins could receive a promotion in rank for every 600 strings of cash (or 600,000 coins).
Under Lê Hiá»Ân Tông a large variety of () coins were cast with varying descriptions on the obverse. In fact it is thought that more variations of the coin exist than of any other Oriental cash coin in history. There were also new large coins introduced with denominations of 50 and 100 and from 1740, various provincial mint marks were added on the reverses of coins. Currently there are around 80 known different kinds of coins. This diversity exists because the Lê government was in dire need of coins to pay for its expenditures, while it needed to collect more taxes in coins, so it began to mint a lot of coins. Later to fulfill this need, the Lê legalised the previously detrimental workshops that were minting inferior coins in 1760 in order to meet the market's high demand for coinage; this backfired as the people found the huge variety in quality and quantity confusing.
In 1775, after capturing ThuáºÂn Hóa from the Nguyá» n lords, Trá»Ânh Sâm stipulated that 3 zinc cash coins from Nam Hàwould be accepted for 1 zinc cash coin from Bắc HÃÂ.
Under Nguyá» n Nhạc the description of Phân () was first added to the reverses of some coins indicating their weight; this continued under the Nguyá» n dynasty. Under the reign of Nguyá» n Huá»Â, () cash coins were produced made in two different types of metal, one series of copper and one series of tin, as well as alloys between the two or copper coins of red copper.
According to the ÃÂại Nam thá»±c lục tiá»Ân biên while fighting the Tây Sán dynasty, the Thế tá» Cao Hoàng ÃÂế issued cash coins with the inscription Gia Hðng Thông Bảo (Ã¥ÂÂèÂÂéÂÂ寶) in 1796.
During the Nguyá» n dynasty period in addition to their circulating zinc, lead, and copper-alloy cash coins the government also produced silver and gold cash coins.
Under the Gia Long Emperor three kinds of cash coins were produced in smaller denominations made of copper, lead, and zinc. According to the book ÃÂại Nam thá»±c lục chÃÂnh biên the first cash coins with the inscription Gia Long Thông Bảo (Ã¥ÂÂéÂÂéÂÂ寶) were cast in the year Gia Long 2 (1803). He officially appointed the Bảo tuyá»Ân cục to be in charge of minting cash coins at Tây Long gate outside the city of Huế. In the year Gia Long 12 the Ministry of Revenue was tasked with producing 7 phân zinc cash coins, 1 string of zinc cash coins were ordered to weigh 2 cân 10 lạng on average, and when exchanged into copper-alloy cash coins 125 strings of zinc cash coins were valued at 100 strings of copper-alloy cash coins. Under the Gia Long Emperor mints were opened in Bắc Thành (Hanoi) and Gia ÃÂá»Ânh (Há» ChàMinh City). In the year Gia Long 13 (1814) another 6 phân zinc cash coin was produced at the Bảo tuyá»Ân cục Bắc Thành and ordered them to imitate the minting techniques of the Qing. At that time, the casting ratio included 500 cân of red copper, 415 cân of zinc, 65 cân of lead, and 20 cân of tin.
The cash coins of the Tây Sán dynasty were initially only allowed to circulate for 5 years after the ascension of Gia Long. According to a document from the year Gia Long 16 (1817) the government of the NguyỠn dynasty ordered for the destruction of all "fake cash coins" from circulation explaining that the prior currency situation was chaotic. The "fake cash coins" were still allowed to circulate in the year Gia Long 15 and must now be destroyed. All payments and salaries for public services and government employees must be expressed in zinc cash coins, government employees must collect all "fake cash coins" they have and store it in a government warehouse to later be melted down and exchanged for the newly minted zinc cash coins. The zinc cash coins were also ordered to circulate in the Southern regions and merchants were ordered to carry them with them whenever they would engage in trade to promote their circulation.
Throughout most of the Nguyá» n dynasty period, the government tried to exclude money it termed Tiá»Ân cấm (é¢ç¦Â, "Forbidden money") from circulation. The Tiá»Ân cấm included the following three categories:
According to the ÃÂại Nam Thá»±c lục chÃÂnh biên, there were several different types of Gia Long Thông Bảo cash coins cast. A bronze cash coin with the inscription Thất phần (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂ) in seal script on its reverse, a thicker zinc cash coin with the inscription Nhất phần on its reverse, and a copper-alloy cash coin with dots on its reverse side symbolising the sun and moon. The 7 phần zinc cash coins started being made from the year Gia Long 12 (1813) onwards.
Since the reign of the Gia Long Emperor, zinc cash coins (, ) had replaced the usage of copper and brass cash coins and formed the basis of the Vietnamese currency system. Under Gia Long the standard 1 vÃÂn denomination coins weighed seven and under the Minh Mạng Emperor six (approximately 2.28 grams) which would remain the standard for future rulers. Zinc cash coins produced in Hanoi under the Tá»± ÃÂức Emperor had the mint mark () on them, with there being another mint in Sán Tây ().
From the Gia Long until the Thiá»Âu Trá» periods 1 copper-alloy cash coin was valued at 1.2 to 1.3 zinc cash coins, from the Tá»± ÃÂức onwards they were valued at 1.3 to 1.4 zinc cash coins each.
From 1837 during the first year of the reign of the Minh Mạng Emperor, Mạch () brass cash coins were issued; these cash coins feature Minh Mạng Thông Bảo () on their obverses but have eight characters on their reverses. One coins would be continued under subsequent rulers of the Nguyá» n dynasty.
Regarding the circulation of both zinc and copper-alloy cash coins in the country the Minh Mạng Emperor wrote: "Our country mints two types of cash coins, copper cash coins (tiá»Ân ÃÂá»Âng) and zinc cash coins (tiá»Ân kẽm). Zinc cash coins are used for consumption, the rich don't dare to hoard them, but the people in neighbouring countries do not dare to bring them back to their country. It's not only beneficial for the people but also for the country. However, if there are no copper cash coins, who will know the name of our country in the future. Therefore, we should not be left without copper cash coins."
In 1849 the Tá»± ÃÂức Emperor was forced to legalise the private production of zinc cash coins as too many illegal mints kept being established throughout both ÃÂại Nam and China. These privately minted zinc cash coins were allowed as long as they circulated according to their correct weights.
However, in 1871 the production of zinc cash coins stopped as many mines were being blocked by Chinese pirates and the continued production of these coins would be too expensive. Other reasons for the discontinuation of zinc cash coins despite them being indispensable to the general populace were because they were heavy compared to their nominal value and the metal was quite brittle. Following the establishment of the French colony of Cochinchina the chaotic monetary situation of ÃÂại Nam severely worsened as Qing Chinese merchants quickly took advantage of it and started producing poor quality cash coins to bring to the colony where no regulations against their activities existed. The Tá»± ÃÂức Emperor tried to search Qing merchant ships, make outposts block their entry, and ban Qing Chinese merchants from bringing in too much money. Though by 1879 the Nguyá» n court was forced to accept the copper-alloy Hành dá» dạng tiá»Ân (deformed money) at a value of 3 zinc cash coins, provided that the cash coin in question was quite similar in quality to the indigenous Vietnamese currency.
To the French, zinc coinage also presented a huge inconvenience since the colonisation of Cochinchina in 1859 as the exchange between French francs and zinc meant that a large number of zinc coins were exchanged for the French franc. Zinc cash coins often broke during transportation as the strings that kept them together would often snap. The coins would fall on the ground and a great number of them would break into pieces; these coins were also less resistant to oxidation, causing them to corrode faster than other coinages.
Prior to 1849 brass coins had become an extreme rarity and only circulated in the provinces surrounding the capital cities of Vietnam, but under Tá»± ÃÂức new regulations and (uniform) standards for copper cash coins were created to help promote their usage. Between 1868 and 1872 brass coins were only around 50% copper, and 50% zinc. Due to the natural scarcity of copper in Vietnam the country always lacked the resources to produce sufficient copper coinage for circulation.
Under Tá»± ÃÂức large coins with the denomination of 60 were introduced. These coins were ordered to circulate at a value of 1 tiá»Ân, but their intrinsic value was significantly lower so they were badly received; the production of these coins was quickly discontinued in favour of 20, 30, 40, and 50 vÃÂn coins known as . In 1870 Tá»± ÃÂức Bảo Sao cash coins of 2, 3, 8, and 9 were issued. Large denomination coins were mostly used for tax collection as their relatively low intrinsic value lowered their spending power on the market.
In 1882, at the time when Eduardo Toda y Güell's Annam and its minor currency was published, only two government mints remained in operation: one in Hanoi, and one in Huế. However, private mints were allowed to cast cash coins with the permission of the government, and a large number of cash coins were also imported from abroad as at that time the Portuguese colony of Macau had six mints with twelve furnaces producing 600,000 cash coins for Vietnam on a daily basis.
Cash coins circulated in the 19th century along with silver and gold bars, as well as silver and gold coins weighed in tiá»Ân. Denominations up to ten were minted, with the seven coins in gold and silver being similar in size and weight to the Spanish eight real and eight escudo pieces. These coins continued to be minted into the 20th century, albeit increasingly supplanted by French colonial coinage.
During the middle of the 1880s there was a shortage of cash coins in the Qing dynasty province of Guangdong, to remedy this Chinese bankers who were active in Vietnam at the time started buying up zinc Vietnamese cash coins to export to Guangdong. During the narrowly defined period ranging from around 1885 to about the 1890s a large quantities of zinc Vietnamese cash coins circulated in the Guangdong Province. However, like the then-scarce Chinese cash coins, the Vietnamese cash coins brought to Guangdong would be sold and exported to overseas Chinese communities in the United States for a profit causing the demand for small denomination cash coins to remain high. It wasn't until 1889 when the Guangzhou Mint started mass-producing high-quality machine-struck brass cash coins that the Vietnamese cash coins would disappear from circulation in Guangdong.
The Chinese abandonment of the Vietnamese zinc cash coins in Guangdong was both rapid and absolute and by the 1890s indigenous machine-struck cash coins made of brass had fully replaced them, as everyone (even those in Vietnam) always preferred the copper-alloy (including brass) cash coins to those made of zinc. Likewise, Chinese customers in the American state of California would have been similarly discriminating quickly ending the demand for zinc Vietnamese cash coins outside of Vietnam. This is also why Vietnamese cash coins are occasionally found in Chinese and overseas Chinese coin hoards dating to the 1880s and later (but never before as up until that point Vietnamese cash coins exclusively circulated in Vietnam).
The Vietnamese cash coins found in Guangdong from this period (and among overseas Guangdongers) range from the Gia Long to the Tá»± ÃÂức period.
After the introduction of modern coinage by the French in 1878, cash coins remained in general circulation in French Cochinchina.
Initially the French attempted to supplement cash coins in circulation by punching round holes into French 1 centime coins and shipping a large amount of them to French Cochinchina, but these coins did not see much circulation and the Cochinchinese people largely rejected them.
On 7 April and 22 April 1879, the governor of French Cochinchina had decreed that the new designs for coins with on them would be accepted with the denominations 2 (cash coins), 1 cent, 10 cents, 20 cents, 50 cents, and the piastre. All coins except for the piastre were allowed to be issued, which allowed for Spanish dollars and Mexican reals to continue circulating. The Paris Mint produced the new machine-struck 2 cash coins. These French-produced bronze cash coins weighed 2 grams and were valued at piastre. They saw considerably more circulation than the previous French attempt at creating cash coins, but were still largely disliked by the Cochinchinese people. The local population still preferred their own () cash coins despite only being valued at piastre.
In the year 1883 the Harmand Treaty was signed, which was replaced in 1884 with the Patenôtre Treaty. These treaties were created following the French conquest of ÃÂại Nam, which established the French protectorates of Annam and Tonkin. While these two countries were in a subordinate relationship with France, they were still nominally ruled by the Nguyá» n Empire and the old currency system continued to be used and produced by the government of the Nguyá» n dynasty there. Despite the later introduction of the French Indochinese piastre, zinc and copper-alloy cash coins would continue to circulate among the Vietnamese populace throughout the country as the primary form of coinage, as the majority of the population lived in extreme poverty until 1945 (and 1948 in some areas). They were valued at the rates of about 500âÂÂ600 cash coins for one piastre. The need for coins was only a minor part in the lives of most Vietnamese people at the time, as bartering remained more common since all coins were bartered on the market according to their current intrinsic values.
During the Kiến Phúc period (2 December 1883 â 31 July 1884), the regent Nguyá» n VÃÂn Tðá»Âng accepted bribes from Qing Chinese merchants to allow them to bring their tiá»Ân sá»Ânh (é¢浧, "extraordinary money") depicting the reign era of the Tá»± ÃÂức Emperor into the country. Nguyá» n VÃÂn Tðá»Âng forced people to accept and spend this bad quality Chinese imitation money, those who refused to accept it could face the penalty of arrest. This money is described as being "very ugly, too thin, and extremely light" (weighing only about 1 gram), according to descriptions it was so light in fact that these cash coins can float on water. Roman Catholic missionaries active in ÃÂại Nam took advantage of bad condition of this new money to propagate the idea that it was a sign that the Nguyá» n dynasty was in decline. These cash coins have sometimes been mistaken for the 17th and 18th century Tiá»Ân gián (with the inscriptions of Thiên Thánh Nguyên Bảo and An Pháp Nguyên Bảo). However, these earlier low quality money was still heavier and more valuable than the nearly worthless tiá»Ân sá»Ânh brought into the country by merchants from the Qing dynasty by the end of the 19th century.
Following the establishment of French Indochina, a new version of the French 2 was produced from 1887 to 1902, which was also valued at piastre and was likely forced on the Vietnamese when they were paid for their goods and services by the French, as the preference still was for indigenous cash coins.
Under French administration the Nguyá» n government issued the (), (), (), (), () cash coins of different metal compositions and weights. Each of these cash coins had their own value against the French Indochinese piastre. Because the exchange values between the native cash coins and silver piastres were confusing, the local Vietnamese people were often cheated by the money changers during this period.
The was mixed with iron when it was minted and featured blank reverse sides. Several batches of cash coins were produced, but due to the fact that the French Army was putting pressure on the Huế Court the throne changed hands several times and the rule of the Emperor was very brief, so not much attention to the economy was paid by government. Because of these factors only a very small number of cash coins were minted which confirm the new Emperor's reign era name, but they didn't have a large effect on the money in circulation as their quantity was too small to make a difference. The cash coins were likewise only minted in small quantities due to his short reign. These cash coins were made from copper-alloys and have the inscription "Lục VÃÂn" (å ÂæÂÂ) on their reverse indicating their denomination.
During the reign of the ÃÂá»Âng Khánh Emperor two series of cash coins were minted; the first series were cast in 1776 with a diameter of 26 millimeters, and the second series in 1887 with a diameter of 23 millimeters. All cash coins from this era had blank reverse sides.
In 1894, the Note sur la circulation monétaire et les moyens d'échange dans les colonies françaises et pays de protectorat, d'après les documents officiels recueillis par l'administration des colonies reported that aside from the piastre and zinc and copper-alloy cash coins other indigenous currencies circulated in the NguyỠn dynasty, these included a silver cash coin which was valued at 2 strings each, a silver sycee weighing 1 Lðợng was valued at 12 strings, a silver Nen was valued at 140 strings, a gold Lðợng valued at 300 strings, and a gold Nen valued at 3000 strings. It was reported that Asian merchants used conventional silver bars made from melted coins that were withdrawn from circulation, these were valued at 15 piastres. In Tonkin zinc cash coins remained in circulation while they only continued to circulate in some regions of Annam.
In 1894 a string of cash coins in Tonkin was composed of 600 zinc cash coins divided into rows of 10 coins each (called a tiá»Ân), while in Annam a string was composed of 100 copper-alloy cash coins divided into rows of 10. At the time 8~10 strings of cash coins were worth a piastre. In the French protectorate of Cambodia a string would contain 450 to 500 Vietnamese cash coins, with 8 cash coins being valued at 1 cent.
On 1 August 1898 it was reported in the that the Huế Mint was closed in 1887, and in 1894 the casting of cash coins had started at the Thanh Hóa Mint. Between the years 1889 and 1890 the Huế Mint produced 1321 strings of 600 small brass cash coins. These small brass cash coins were valued at six zinc cash coins. In the year 1893, large brass cash coins with a denomination of ten vÃÂn (, ), or ten zinc cash coins, started being produced by the Huế Mint. The production of cash coins were resumed at the Thanh Hóa Mint between the years 1894 and 1899. Under Emperor Thành Thái gold and silver coinages were also produced.
In the year 1902 the French ceased production of machine-struck cash coins at the Paris Mint and completely deferred the production of cash coins back to the government of the Nguyá» n dynasty. There were people in Hanoi and Saigon that still preferred the French machine-struck cash coins, so a committee was set up in Hanoi that created a machine-struck zinc cash coin valued at piastre dated 1905 but issued in 1906. However, this series of cash coins was not well received by either the local or the French population as the coins were brittle, prone to corrosion, and easily broken, so their production was quickly halted.
In order to try to standardise the exchange rate between the French Indochinese piastre and cash coins, the Resident-Superior of the French protectorate of Tonkin fixed the local Tonkinese exchange rates every month. This was done to prevent rampant speculation by Chinese merchants and Nguyá» n dynasty mandarins. Money changers generally tended to value the piastre based on its weight in silver, but also according to the perfection of its strike, and even according to the purity of its silver. The official exchange rates were not rigorously applied and the money changers often estimated their own values to individual piastre coins.
In order to combat deflation both the Government-General of French Indochina and the imperial government of the Nguyá» n dynasty fixed the exchange rate of the newly introduced Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Thông Bảo at 6 zinc cash coins according to an ordonnance entitled Fixing the exchange of the new cash coins bearing the reign era of Khải ÃÂá»Ânh (Fixant la valeur d'échange de la nouvelle sapèque portant la chiffre de Règne Khai-Dinh) signed on 01-09-Khải ÃÂá»Ânh 5 (12 October 1920) by five of the six ministers of the Nguyá» n dynasty, the Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Emperor, and the Governor-General of French Indochina Maurice Long. The imperial ordonnance noted that in the French protectorate of Tonkin the Gia Long Thông Bảo (Ã¥ÂÂéÂÂéÂÂ寶) and the Minh Mạng Thông Bảo (æÂÂå½éÂÂ寶) as well as zinc cash coins were unanimously accepted, while the Thiá»Âu Trá» Thông Bảo (紹治éÂÂ寶) and the Tá»± ÃÂức Thông Bảo (å£德éÂÂ寶) cash coins weren't accepted by the local population. Meanwhile in the provinces of Nghá» An and Thanh Hóa they would sometimes all be accepted but at other times they would be refused like they were in Tonkin. The ordonnance stated that the people of ÃÂại Nam are "warned that cash coins are for their daily life and serve as an article of their very first necessity" and that "there is no worse malaise than the scarcity of cash coins", while emphasising that the production costs of the currency is higher than their nominal and market value and that their continued production constitutes a heavy burden both for the French Indochinese and Nguyá» n dynasty governments, but that the government prefers to bear this burden than let the people suffer from the negative consequences of their scarcity.
The last monarch whose name was cast on cash coins, Emperor Bảo ÃÂại, died in 1997.
In 1932 it was reported by L'ÃÂveil économique de l'Indochine ("The Economic Awakening of Indochina") that cash coins were increasingly becoming scarce in Annam and Tonkin, the L'ÃÂveil économique de l'Indochine advised the government of the Nguyá» n dynasty to start producing zinc Bảo ÃÂại Thông Bảo cash coins to counter the scarcity of low denomination currencies, at this time zinc cash coins were still circulating in Annam while very few of them were left in Tonkin.
In 1936 the House of Representatives of the People of Annam wrote in an advisory report, after an in-depth investigation, that they advised the French and NguyỠn governments against demonetising and replacing old cash coins in favour of a new uniform cash coin. They argued that while the new ý cent coins were received without much difficulty, their quantity was still insufficient and their circulation too limited for them to be able to serve as a basis for an operation to withdraw older cash coins from circulation. Therefore, the House of Representatives proposed a solution by not withdrawing old cash coins from circulation through the production of a new unit to replace them, but by introducing a new uniform cash coin to circulate alongside old cash coins and unifying their exchange courses with cash coins whose demonetisation is very difficult, which would allow for their exchange courses to stabilise in relation to the ý cent coins as more of the latter would be brought into the market to circulate.
On 29 September 1939 the Hanoian newspaper l'Effort Indochinois reported that the governments of French Indochina and the Nguyá» n dynasty pursued a policy called an muoi (the introduction of large denomination debased cash coins which only had a slightly higher intrinsic value to drive out lower value cash coins), which sought to stabilise the exchange rate between cash coins and the piastre at 360:1. During this period there was a market liquidity crisis worsened by the hoarding of low denomination cash coins by the general populace causing massive deflation of cash coins. There has been a serious devaluation of the piastre in Annam, among the solutions proposed by the government of French Indochina was the increased production of paper money. Despite starting the an muoi policy in 1937, by 1939 the exchange rate between the piastre and cash coins was at 5 strings per piastre while in some rural areas the price of the piastre went down as much as 3 strings per piastre.
The deflation of cash coins proved to be very detrimental to the economy and local trade. The reason why these exchange rates were unstable was because cash coins remained independent of the piastre, despite their fixed exchange rates. l'Effort Indochinois reported that in Tonkin the Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Thông Bảo and Bảo ÃÂại Thông Bảo cash coins were less sensitive to the deflationary pressure caused by hoarding than older cash coins as they weren't being overvalued in the market in relation to the French Indochinese piastre. As Tonkinese people had a much higher standard of living than the Annamites, the velocity of money was likewise faster and coins like the 10 cents, 20 cents, Etc. mingled more with the cash coins in Tonkin than they did in Annam.
l'Effort Indochinois noted that many causes of the deflation and hoarding were more psychological in nature rather than practical, noting that the new cash coins that were being produced in Tonkin was manufactured in a different way from the old ones (machine-struck vs. cast) and that this development was even more recent than banknotes. Meanwhile, in Annam large quantities of Minh Mạng Thông Bảo, Thiá»Âu Trá» Thông Bảo, Etc. as well as millennium old cash coins remained in circulation as the population stubbornly held onto them. In fact, there remained a strong preference for cast Bảo ÃÂại Thông Bảo cash coins over machine-struck ones of the same inscription. This was as the population preferred to keep with the traditional currency system and that cast cash coins were seen as "good old sapèques" from "the good old days" as opposed to both machine-struck cash coins and the French Indochinese piastre who saw it as "modern inventions incompatible with their traditional lifestyles". To combat this mentality l'Effort Indochinois advised the government to mint cash coins of different models and metals and to give them a clearly defined value in relation to the divisionaries of the piastre and introduce them to the Annamese countryside, as well as to introduce the machine-struck Bảo ÃÂại Thông Bảo that were already circulating in Tonkin into rural Annam.
On 9 August 1941 the Ministry of Finance of the imperial government of the Nguyá» n dynasty issued an act informing the provincial mandarins of Annam on how to enforce new rules set up by the Nguyá» n dynasty government to try to curb deflation. According to the Minister of Finance Há» ÃÂắc Khải the fall in the market exchange rates between cash coins and piastres (especially in the Thanh Hóa, Nghá» An, and HàTénh provinces) wasn't solely caused by the scarcity of cash coins but also by false rumours spread by illicit currency speculators who sought to devalue the French Indochinese piastre in relation to cash coins to later exchange their hoarded cash coins at higher rates making a profit. The increased value of cash coins relative to the piastre also lead to a general increase in the cost of living as well as making commercial transactions less convenient for the majority of the population, who typically relied on cash coins to pay for their common purchases. Há» ÃÂắc Khải noted that the two governments (both the governments of French Indochina and the Nguyá» n dynasty) sought to remedy the situation, with one of the remedies being the issuance of a large number of ü cent, ý cent, and 1 coins to help alleviate the need for low value coinages due to the scarcity of cash coins.
While waiting for the government to be in a position to ensure a radical reform of the monetary system in Annam, the Nguyá» n dynasty government adopted a number of temporary measures to try to counter the deflation caused by the scarcity of cash coins in 1941 and the instable monetary situation in the Thanh-Nghá»Â-Ténh region. In 1941 the official exchange rate between cash coins and the French Indochinese piastre was set at 6 strings of 50 cash coins per piastre, but the market rate was either at 2 or 3 strings of 50 cash coins per piastre. For that reason the Ministry of Finance petitioned the Bảo ÃÂại Emperor to issue an imperial decree (è«Â, dụ) which would fix the exchange rate at 4 strings of cash coins per piastre with any deviation of this rate becoming punishable by high sanctions. Immediately after the issuance of this decree the provincial mandarins could enforce it together with French provincial residents.
Besides the fixed exchange rates, other measures taken to attempt to alleviate the scarcity of cash coins included limiting the amount of strings of cash coins that a family may own to a maximum of 200 strings per household and 400 strings of cash coins per merchant establishment with the surplus of this authorised quantity being placed back into general circulation by exchanging the surplus strings of cash coins with banknotes to individuals at the official exchange rate of 4 strings per piastre. Any excess strings of cash coins held by an individual had to be legally declared to the local prefect (Tri phá»§), district magistrate (Tri huyá»Ân), or the Bang-ta who would then centralise the declarations of the hoarders and send reports to the provincial mandarins. If the stock of cash coins was large enough, the provincial mandarins could distribute the stored cash coins among the various districts of their province. Private individuals would then be able to exchange their banknotes for the redistributed cash coins at the official exchange rate with each family (household) being limited to a maximum of 20 strings.
In order to enable the administration to exercise control over the situation of cash coins, any person who has received and held, after the previous exchange, a quantity of cash coins greater than 200 strings for individuals and 400 strings for merchants, was required to report the movement of cash coins held during these periods to the heads of the districts concerned around the 1st and 15th of each month. If someone failed to report any cash coins in excess of the permitted quantity, the authorities could confiscate their cash coins as a penalty to benefit the budget of the government of the Nguyá» n dynasty, mostly to pay the salaries of the local mandarins and government employees in cash coins instead of paying them using fiduciary banknotes.
On Decree Number 55 dated 02-07-Bảo ÃÂại 16 (24 August 1941) the Bảo ÃÂại Emperor issued an ordonnance which states that within the entire territory of Trung Kỳ (Annam) the exchange rate between copper-alloy cash coins and the piastre was fixed at a rate of 4 strings of cash coins for 1 French Indochinese piastre, replacing the earlier Decree Number 1 of 21 February 1934 which fixed it at 6 strings of 50 cash coins. This decree applied to any cash coin bearing a reign era of the Nguyá» n dynasty, with the definition of 4 strings of cash coins consisting of either 400 an-sau (6 vÃÂn) cash coins or 240 an-muoi (10 vÃÂn) cash coins.
After the Democratic Republic of Vietnam declared their independence in 1945 they began issuing their own money, but cash coins continued to circulate in the remote areas of Bắc BỠand Trung BỠwhere there was a lack of , , and coins for the population. The Democratic Republic of Viet Nam Decree 51/SL of 6 January 1947 officially set the exchange rate at twenty Vietnamese cash coins for one North Vietnamese making them equal to five each. Vietnamese cash coins continued to officially circulate in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam until 13 April 1948.
During the Vietnam War a large number of Vietnamese numismatic charms with both authentic as well as fantasy coin inscriptions were produced in South Vietnam to be sold to foreigners interested in collecting Vietnamese antiques. These fantasy inscriptions included legends like (), (), and (), the latter of which was based on the Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Thông Bảo ().
During the almost 1000 years that Vietnamese copper cash coins were produced, they often significantly changed quality, alloy, size, and workmanship. In general, the coins bear the era name(s) of the monarch (Niên hiá»Âu/) but may also be inscribed with mint marks, denominations, miscellaneous characters, and decorations.
Unlike Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and Ryà «kyà «an cash coins that always have the inscription in only one typeface, Vietnamese cash coins tend to be more idiosyncratic, bearing sometimes Regular script, Seal script, and even Running script on the same coins for different characters, and it is not uncommon for one coin to be cast almost entirely in one typeface but with an odd character in another. Though early Vietnamese coins often bore the calligraphic style of the Chinese Khai Nguyên Thông Bảo () coin, especially those from the ÃÂinh until the Trần dynasties.
The following coins were produced to circulate in Vietnam:
At various times many rebel leaders proclaimed themselves as lords (), kings (), and emperors (), and had produced their own coinage with their reign names and titles on them, but as their rebellions would prove unsuccessful or brief, their reigns and titles would go unrecorded in Vietnamese history. Therefore, coins produced by their rebellions cannot easily be classified. Coins were also often privately cast and these coins were sometimes of high quality or well-made imitations of imperial coinage, though often they would bear the same inscriptions as already circulating coinage and sometimes they would have "newly invented" inscriptions. The NguyỠn lords that ruled over Southern Vietnam had also produced their own coinage at various times as they were the de facto kings of the South, but as their rule was unofficial, it is currently unknown which coins can be attributed to which NguyỠn lord. Since Edouard Toda made his list in 1882, several of the coins that he had described as "originating from the Quảng Nam province" have been ascribed to the NguyỠn lords that the numismatists of his time could not identify. During the rule of the NguyỠn lords, many foundries for private mintage were also opened and many of these coins bear the same inscriptions as government-cast coinage or even bear newly invented inscriptions, making it hard to attribute these coins.
The following list contains Vietnamese cash coins whose origins cannot be (currently) established:
During the time that Vietnam was under French administration, the French started minting cash coins for circulation first for within the colony of Cochinchina and then for the other regions of Vietnam. These coins were minted in Paris and were all struck as opposed to the contemporary cast coinage that already circulated within Vietnam.
After the French had annexed Cochinchina from the Vietnamese, cash coins would continue to circulate in the region and depending on their weight and metal (as Vietnamese cash coins made from copper, tin, and zinc circulated simultaneously at the time at fluctuating rates) were accepted at six hundred to one thousand cash coins for a single Mexican or Spanish eight real coin or one piastre. In 1870 the North German company Dietrich Uhlhorn started privately minting machine-struck Tá»± ÃÂức Thông Bảo (å£德éÂÂ寶) coins as the demand for cash coins in French Cochinchina was high. The coin weighed four grams which was close to the official weight of ten phần (3.7783 grams), which was the standard used by the imperial government at the time. Around 1875 the French introduced holed one-cent coins styled after the Vietnamese cash. In 1879 the French introduced the Cochinchinese Sapèque with a nominal value of piastre, but the Vietnamese population at the time still preferred the old Tá»± ÃÂức Thông Bảo coins despite their lower nominal value. The weight and size of the French Indochinese one-cent coin was reduced and the coin was holed in 1896 in order to appear more similar to cash coins. This was done to reflect the practice of stringing coins together and carrying them on a belt or pole because Oriental garments at the time did not have pockets. The French production of machine-struck cash coins was halted in 1902. As there were people in Hanoi and Saigon that did not want to give up on the production of machine-struck cash coins, a committee decided to strike zinc Sapèque coins with a nominal value of piastre. These coins were produced at the Paris Mint and were dated 1905 despite being put into circulation only in 1906. These coins corroded and broke quite easily which made them unpopular and their production quickly ceased.
After Khải ÃÂá»Ânh became Emperor in 1916, Hanoi reduced the funds to cast Vietnamese cash coins, which had a dissatisfying effect on the Vietnamese market as the demand for cash coins remained high, so another committee was formed in Hanoi that ordered the creation of machine-struck copper-alloy Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Thông Bảo (Ã¥ÂÂå®ÂéÂÂ寶) cash coins to be minted in Haiphong. These coins weighed more than the old French Sapèques and were around 2.50 grams and were accepted at piastre. There were 27 million Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Thông Bảo of the first variant produced, while the second variant of the machine-struck Khải ÃÂá»Ânh Thông Bảo had a mintage of 200 million. This was likely continued after the ascension of Emperor Bảo ÃÂại in 1926, which was normal as previous Vietnamese emperors also kept producing cash coins with the inscription of their predecessors for a period of time. Emperor Bảo ÃÂại had ordered the creation of cast Bảo ÃÂại Thông Bảo (ä¿Â大éÂÂ寶) cash coins again which weighed 3.2 gram in 1933, while the French simultaneously began minting machine-struck coins with the same inscription that weighed 1.36 grams and were probably valued at piastre. There were two variants of this cash coin, where one had a large 大 (ÃÂại) while the other had a smaller 大.
Gold and silver cash coins were not made in any other period of Vietnamese history until the Nguyá» n dynasty, and during the Nguyá» n their production was still very limited in number. But the emperors of the Nguyá» n dynasty sought to expand the mintage of both gold and silver coins. According to the laws for casting coins in those metals, those used for paying mandarins are to be round in shape, and in ingots for payment to the troops in time of war.
The Nguyá» n dynasty produced a large number of both gold and silver medals which had inscriptions and allegories relating to the Five Precious Things (äºÂ寶, ngà © bảo). These gold and silver medals were distributed by the emperor in return for services to the state. These medals, however, pass into circulation and are taken as currency according to their weight.
During the 60th birthday of Revival Lê dynasty Emperor Lê Hiá»Ân Tông in 1774, a special Vạn Thá» Thông Bảo (è¬å¤ÂéÂÂ寶) amulet was cast; these charms were often used to commemorate the birthday of an emperor as had happened in the Qing dynasty with the 60th birthdays of Chinese emperors. The reason these charms are cast on this particular event is because sixty years symbolise a complete cycle of the ten heavenly stems and the twelve earthly branches.
Special cash coins were also produced in the form of decorations given by the government of the Nguyá» n dynasty until 1945. Like in Imperial China, these coins came in the form of presentation coins (known in Vietnamese as Tiá»Ân), but after French colonisation these special cash coin awards known as Tiá»Ân were later also awarded as European-style medals called the Sapèque d'Honneur ('Cash coin of Honour').
These presentation coin decorations came in multiple classes and were known as ÃÂá»Âng Tiá»Ân (é é¢, 'Copper money'), Ngân Tiá»Ân (éÂÂé¢, 'Silver money'), and Kim Tiá»Ân (éÂÂé¢, 'Gold money'). The Sapèque d'Honneur medal was further subdivided into the Sapèque d'Argent (made of silver) and the Sapèque d'Or (made of gold).
These decorations generally took the shape of silver or gold cash coins as well as other coinages issued by the Nguyá» n dynasty, but would often have more elaborate designs and (often) different inscriptions.
In modern Vietnam the supply of undiscovered cash coins is rapidly declining as large amounts of Vietnamese cash coins were excavated during the 1980s and 1990s. In Vietnam the excavation of antiques such as cash coins is an industry in itself and cash coins are mostly dug up by farmers. After the Vietnam War ended in 1975, a large number of metal detectors numbering in the many thousands were left behind in the former area of South Vietnam, which helped fuel the rise of this industry. The antique bronze industry is mostly concentrated in small rural villages where farmers rent metal detectors to search their own lands for bronze antiques to then either sell as scrap or to dealers. These buyers purchase lumps of cash coins either by the kilogramme or ton and hire skilled people to search through these lumps of cash coins for sellable specimens. These coins are then sold to other dealers in Vietnam, China, and Japan. During the zenith of the coin recovery business in Vietnam, the number of bulk coins found on a monthly basis was fifteen tons. Only roughly fifteen kilogrammes of those coins were sellable and the rest of the coins would be melted down as scrap metal. As better metal detectors that could search deeper were introduced, more Vietnamese cash coins were discovered, but in modern times the supply of previously undiscovered Vietnamese cash coins is quickly diminishing.
In modern times many Vietnamese cash coins are found in sunken shipwrecks which are mandated by Vietnamese law to be the property of the Vietnamese government as salvaged ships of which the owner was unknown belong to the state.
Notable recent large finds of cash coins in Vietnam include 100 kilogrammes of Chinese cash coins and 35 kilogrammes of Vietnamese cash coins unearthed in the province of Quảng Trá» in 2007, 52.9 kilogrammes of Chinese and Vietnamese cash coins unearthed in a cemetery in Haiphong in 2008, 50 kilogrammes of cash coins in the province of HàNam in 2015, and some Nagasaki trade coins in the province of HàTénh in 2018.