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1 Bu Hyōgo Port Development

Issuer Japan
Year 1867
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Currency Ryō (1595-1874)
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Obverse lettering 〇官
金壹分
慶應
丁卯
發行
(Translation: [] Gold one Bu Keiō [year] hinoto-u (Year of the Fire-Rabbit) issue)
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Reverse lettering 會計
〇〇
與實貨同
〇〇
〇〇
(Translation: Account [] Equivalent to coin currency [] [])
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Comments

Hyōgo port — modern Kobe — was forcibly opened to foreign trade in January 1868 under the terms of the 1858 Ansei Treaties, and local merchant financing of the harbor expansion created a brief need for small-denomination scrip that could function outside the existing han currency systems. The bu was already a fractional unit under pressure: the Meiji transition would abolish it entirely within a few years of this note's issue.

The extreme elongation of the format is characteristic of Edo-period Japanese paper money conventions, derived directly from the proportions of traditional tanzaku strips rather than any Western banking influence.