钱币论坛_首席收藏网

 找回密码
 立即注册

首席专场竞买 | 春拍四月 24日 K&R#43 | 27日 邓通 | 五月 3日 MDC#14 | 7日 Sedwick#35 | 16日 泓盛 | 17日 第23届CICE北京 | 六月 1日 宜和 | 13日 SA | 15日 华艺 | 16日 SA

首席甄选店铺 首席收藏官方店铺 | 茉莉钱庄 | 权芳斋 | 德泉缘 | 德藏世界币章 | 广银阁 | 姑苏银庄 | 东丰阁 | 剑客精品银圆 | 成都小江 | WNumismatics

精选藏品列表 皇冠收藏 | 北京阿城哥 | 天生銀家 | 泉博文物 | 小陈弟弟 | 万泉斋 | 泉是漏 | 浩川收藏 | 蜀藏阁 | 汕头博雅藏 | 梧诲泉阁 | 凝晖堂

查看: 3968|回复: 4

Three Hole Spades(三孔布)

[复制链接]

79

主题

909

帖子

2648

积分

进士

Rank: 6Rank: 6

积分
2648
发表于 2016-11-2 12:34:33 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
Three Hole Spades
Written by GARY ASHKENAZY


37.jpg


On November 25, 2012, a very rare coin from the Warring States period (475-221 BC) was sold at auction by the Beijing ChengXuan Auctions Co., Ltd (北京诚轩拍卖有限公司). The coin sold for US$591,000 (RMB 3,680,000) which set a new world record for an ancient Chinese coin:http://data.shouxi.com/item.php?id=14959

The coin, shown at the left, is known as a “three hole spade” (san kong bu 三孔布) which is a type of money that evolved from an ancient farming implement similar to a shovel.  While similar forms of spade money with a round “handle”, round “shoulders” and “round” feet were produced by several of the Warring States, this particular type of spade money is quite distinctive because it has “three holes” with one each in the “head” and the two “feet”.

Three hole spades are so rare that it is unlikely that you will ever see an authentic piece outside of a museum.

Many are one-of-a-kind with some varieties being only fragments.

The National Museum of China in Beijing and the Shanghai Museum have several specimens. The Bank of Japan Currency Museum in Tokyo also has an outstanding collection.

Most of the other known examples are in the hands of private collectors outside of China.

This particular three hole spade has a very well-documented provenance.

Its first documented appearance was about 200 years ago when it became part of the collection of Zhang Tingji (张廷济), a famous artist and epigrapher (1768-1848) of the Qing Dynasty.  A rubbing of this specific coin appeared in his “Ancient Coin Rubbings” (古泉拓本) which made it the first three hole spade to ever appear in publication.

During the Republican era (1912-1949), the coin was obtained by the famous Chinese coin collector Zhang Shuxun (张叔驯) and the rubbing of this coin has appeared in almost every Chinese coin catalog published since then.

The Chinese characters on the obverse side are xia qu yang (下邲阳).  Xia qu yang is believed to have been a city located in what is now Ningjin Prefecture (宁晋县) in Hebei Province (河北省).

The inscription on the reverse side of the coin is believed to be shi qi liang (十七两). The shi qi, written on the handle, translates as “17” and the denomination of the coin is one liang or “tael”.

Three hole spades come in two sizes: the “large” ones are about 7.2 cm in length, 3.8 cm in width and weigh approximately 15.8 grams.

The “small” three hole spades, which have a denomination of half liang (12 zhu (朱)), are about 5.2 cm in length, 2.7 cm in width and weigh approximately 8.2 grams.

This particular spade has a length of 7.35 cm, a width of 3.7 cm and a weight of 13.4 grams.

There is some controversy as to which state actually cast these coins.  They are believed to have circulated as money in what is now eastern Shanxi and Hebei during the end of the Warring States period.  Some experts believe the coins were cast by the State of Zhao (赵).  Others believe it was Zhong Shan (中山).  Still others believe it was the State of Qin (秦).

Based on archaeological digs as well as the names of the cities identified from the inscriptions on these coins, the strongest evidence is that they were cast by the State of Zhao.

Three hole spades are also noted for using the denomination liang (“tael”) and zhu which were the denominations of the coins of the State of Qin.  For this reason, these coins are believed to have been produced in areas under Qin’s influence but prior to the unification of China under the Qin Dynasty in 221 BC.

Based on specimens appearing in coin catalogs dating back to the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), there are believed to be more than ten city names used in the inscriptions and a total of more than thirty varieties of this coin.  Chinese numismatists remain puzzled as to why a state would issue so many varieties in such small quantities.

While there are many very rare and valuable old Chinese coins, this three hole spade, as already mentioned, set a new record for the highest price ever paid for an ancient Chinese coin.

40.jpg


It is a testament as to just how rare these three hole spade coins are that the previous record for the most expensive ancient Chinese coin was another three hole spade.  The inscription on that coin was wu yang (武阳) and it sold in 2010 at the China Guardian Auction for about US$567,000 (RMB 3,528,000).http://data.shouxi.com/item.php?id=63369

----------------------------------------------------------------
Here are two links that from shouxi.com which help to understand the articles.
三孔布创最贵古钱成交记录 国别至今难定论
http://coin.shouxi.com/news/highlight/2016/0419/2283.html
名家旧藏孤品三孔布 佐证史料考究衡制演变
http://coin.shouxi.com/news/highlight/2013/1108/112.html
回复

使用道具 举报

92

主题

683

帖子

3558

积分

入阁

Rank: 8Rank: 8

积分
3558
发表于 2016-11-2 15:20:15 | 显示全部楼层
Good introduction.
http://pcgs-gbca.taobao.com
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

240

主题

1995

帖子

9450

积分

版主

Rank: 7Rank: 7Rank: 7

积分
9450

活跃会员热心会员优秀版主

发表于 2016-11-2 15:30:10 | 显示全部楼层
a fantasitic coin,just like a mystery。
传承历史积淀,弘扬乡土文化
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

1

主题

1148

帖子

4415

积分

入阁

Rank: 8Rank: 8

积分
4415
发表于 2016-11-2 22:51:34 | 显示全部楼层
Fantastic introductionThanks for sharing!
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

21

主题

354

帖子

2024

积分

进士

Rank: 6Rank: 6

积分
2024
发表于 2016-11-6 15:38:31 | 显示全部楼层
对布币一知半解,楼主兄的文章不错。学习了!
天薄我福,吾厚吾德以迎之;天劳我形,吾逸吾心以补之;天厄我遇,吾亨吾道以通之。[color=Red][/color]
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

本版积分规则

QQ|Archiver|手机版|小黑屋|首席收藏 ( 京ICP备11006322号-8 )

GMT+8, 2024-4-25 22:53 , Processed in 0.029668 second(s), 23 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

© 2013-2024 ShouXi.com

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表