Issued under Lý Thái Tông in the third year of the Minh Đạo reign period, this cash coin represents one of the earliest indigenous Vietnamese coinages produced under the Lý dynasty — a dynasty that had only recently consolidated control over Đại Việt following independence from Chinese rule in 939. The Lý court modeled its coinage closely on contemporary Song dynasty issues, a deliberate administrative choice rather than imitation, reflecting the bureaucratic structures the dynasty was actively importing and adapting.
The Toda gap in attribution suggests cataloging uncertainty that persists in the literature. Barker's 5.1 placement positions it among the foundational issues of the series.
Issued under Lý Thái Tông in the third year of the Minh Đạo reign period, this cash coin represents one of the earliest indigenous Vietnamese coinages produced under the Lý dynasty — a dynasty that had only recently consolidated control over Đại Việt following independence from Chinese rule in 939. The Lý court modeled its coinage closely on contemporary Song dynasty issues, a deliberate administrative choice rather than imitation, reflecting the bureaucratic structures the dynasty was actively importing and adapting.
The Toda gap in attribution suggests cataloging uncertainty that persists in the literature. Barker's 5.1 placement positions it among the foundational issues of the series.