Chinese Coins

Chinese Coins PDF

Author: Liuliang Yu

Publisher: LONG RIVER PRESS

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 80

ISBN-13: 9781592650170

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Illustrated introductory guide to the history and use of coins and money in China

Coins, Trade, and the State

Coins, Trade, and the State PDF

Author: Ethan Issac Segal

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2020-03-17

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 1684175070

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Framed by the decline of the Heian aristocracy in the late 1100s and the rise of the Tokugawa shogunate in the early 1600s, Japan’s medieval era was a chaotic period of diffuse political power and frequent military strife. This instability prevented central authorities from regulating trade, issuing currency, enforcing contracts, or guaranteeing property rights. But the lack of a strong central government did not inhibit economic growth. Rather, it created opportunities for a wider spectrum of society to participate in trade, markets, and monetization. Peripheral elites—including merchants, warriors, rural estate managers, and religious leaders—devised new ways to circumvent older forms of exchange by importing Chinese currency, trading in local markets, and building an effective system of long-distance money remittance. Over time, the central government recognized the futility of trying to stifle these developments, and by the sixteenth century it asserted greater control over monetary matters throughout the realm. Drawing upon diaries, tax ledgers, temple records, and government decrees, Ethan Isaac Segal chronicles how the circulation of copper currency and the expansion of trade led to the start of a market-centered economy and laid the groundwork for Japan’s transformation into an early modern society.