Mon (Japanese coin): Difference between revisions

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{{speedydelete|Big Speedydelete|[[User:Stephen Ewen|Stephen Ewen]] 21:20, 18 February 2007 (CST)}}The '''Mon''' (文) was a currency in [[Japan]] from about [[1636]] to [[1871]]. The "Mon" was part of the effort by the [[Tokugawa]] [[Shogun]]s to create a unified currency system, and was modelled after the imported chinese copper coins (e.g. Huang Song Yuan Bao, Xi Ning Yuan Bao). The "Mon" coins gradually deteriorated in quality due to the inflationary minting of copper coins and at the end of the [[Edo Period]] a 100 Mon coin actually contained material worth only 5.5 Mons of the copper coin. The coin was replaced in 1871 by the [[Yen]].
The '''Mon''' (文) was a currency in [[Japan]] from about [[1636]] to [[1871]]. The "Mon" was part of the effort by the [[Tokugawa]] [[Shogun]]s to create a unified currency system, and was modelled after the imported chinese copper coins (e.g. Huang Song Yuan Bao, Xi Ning Yuan Bao). The "Mon" coins gradually deteriorated in quality due to the inflationary minting of copper coins and at the end of the [[Edo Period]] a 100 Mon coin actually contained material worth only 5.5 Mons of the copper coin. The coin was replaced in 1871 by the [[Yen]].


==Source==
==Source==

Revision as of 00:49, 19 February 2007

The Mon (文) was a currency in Japan from about 1636 to 1871. The "Mon" was part of the effort by the Tokugawa Shoguns to create a unified currency system, and was modelled after the imported chinese copper coins (e.g. Huang Song Yuan Bao, Xi Ning Yuan Bao). The "Mon" coins gradually deteriorated in quality due to the inflationary minting of copper coins and at the end of the Edo Period a 100 Mon coin actually contained material worth only 5.5 Mons of the copper coin. The coin was replaced in 1871 by the Yen.

Source