Catalog
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| Issuer | Qingjiang City Grain and Oil Bureau |
|---|---|
| Year | 1975 |
| Type | Vouchers |
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| Obverse description | Printed in red-orange on a pale yellow underprint with a foliate border pattern, the obverse carries the title inscription 清江市食油券 along the top within a ruled panel flanked by diagonal hatching. The central vignette shows an arch bridge over water with stylised clouds, set against a light guilloche background. To the right, the denomination 壹两 appears within an ornate cartouche, while a circular official control stamp reading 清江市粮油券专用章 is applied at centre; the year 1975 is set in a ruled panel at the foot. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | 清江市食油券 清江市粮油券专用章 壹两 1975 (Translation: Qingjiang City Edible Oil Coupons Qingjiang City Grain and Oil Coupon Stamp One Liang 1975) |
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| Comments |
Chinese local ration stamps from the Maoist period are among the most documentation-dense of all paper ephemera — each one encoding not just a commodity entitlement but the precise administrative unit responsible for its distribution. The Qingjiang City Grain and Oil Bureau operated under the dual-track rationing system that governed edible oils from the early 1950s until well into the reform era, issuing stamps tied to registered household grain books. One liang — one-sixteenth of a jin — represents the kind of fractional denomination that only makes sense when monthly cooking oil allocations for an entire family might be measured in a few hundred grams.
Qingjiang was redesignated as Huai'an City in 2001.