Li Pobei
editDuring a Jurchen invasion that occurred in November 1125, Li Pobei (李婆備) took advantage of this situation and rebelled against the Northern Song dynasty. He is known to have cast cash coins with the inscription "Taiping Tongbao" (太平通寶).[1]
Inscription | Traditional Chinese | Simplified Chinese | Denominations | Years of production | Leader | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Taiping Tongbao | 太平通寶 | 太平通宝 | 1 wén, 2 wén, 5 wén | 1127–1130 | Li Pobei |
Shu Dynasty below
editThis page section serves as "the Editing History" of List of Chinese cash coins by inscription#Shu dynasty and is preserved for historical purposes as well as attribution. Done. --Donald Trung (talk) 21:24, 7 September 2018 (UTC)
Shu dynasty
editIn the year 993 Li Shun alongside Wang Xiangbo rebelled against the Northern Song dynasty, in the year 994 Li Shun proclaimed himself to be the "King of the Great Shu dynasty" in Chengdu. Li Shun was defeated and killed in the year 995. During his period he had two reign eras and produced cash coins with inscriptions reflecting both of these.[2]
List of cash coins issued by the Great Shu dynasty:
Inscription | Traditional Chinese | Simplified Chinese | King | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yingyun Tongbao | 應運通寶 | 应运通宝 | Li Shun (李顺) | |
Yingyun Yuanbao | 應運元寶 | 应运元宝 | Li Shun (李顺) | |
Yinggan Tongbao | 應感通寶 | 应感通宝 | Li Shun (李顺) |
References
edit- ^ Fisher's Ding, entry #1610.
- ^ Hartill 2005, p. 159.
Standard reference templates
edit- September 2018.
- <ref name="">{{cite web|url= |title= .|date=|accessdate= September 2018|author= |publisher= |language=en}}</ref>