Catalogo
| Emittente | Hiroshima Domain (Japanese feudal domains) |
|---|---|
| Anno | 1847 |
| Tipo | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Valore | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Valuta | Mon (794-1870) |
| Composizione | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Dimensioni | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Forma | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Stampatore | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Disegnatore/i | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Incisore/i | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| In circolazione fino al | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Riferimento/i | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Descrizione del dritto | Printed in black with a red overstamp; black seals applied. A full-length vignette of Daikokuten, the god of wealth, is positioned at the top, front-facing and standing upon two rice bales while shouldering a large treasure bag with his right hand. The denomination is rendered vertically within a cartouche in the centre of the note, with the issuing authority inscription below, followed by vertical columns bearing the names of responsible officials. |
|---|---|
| Legenda del dritto | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Descrizione del rovescio | Printed in black with black seals applied. A seated deity occupies the upper vignette, with a Hōju Cintāmaṇi (wish-fulfilling jewel) rendered against a Seigaiha (blue ocean wave) patterned background below. The denomination appears vertically within a central cartouche, with further vertical inscriptions in Chinese seal script at the foot of the note. |
| Legenda del rovescio | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Firma/e | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Tipo di protezione | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Descrizione della protezione | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Varianti | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Commenti |
Hiroshima Domain's paper money circulated as domain-specific hansatsu — notes valid only within the issuing han's territory and legally worthless beyond its borders. This created a fractured monetary geography across Tokugawa Japan, with hundreds of feudal domains running parallel currency systems that merchants navigating domain borders had to manage through exchange brokers. The 1 monme denomination was a silver-unit abstraction; actual silver payment was rarely made, the note functioning instead as a transferable credit within the domain's commercial circuit.
The red overstamp on this example almost certainly indicates a revalidation or authorized re-issue — a common administrative mechanism when domain finances were restructured, not evidence of a separate printing.