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10 Monme With Additional Print

Issuer Amagasaki Domain (Japanese feudal domains)
Year 1777
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Size 192 × 81 mm
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Obverse lettering 札 崎 尼 州 攝
含章
安永六丁酉歳



崎尼
引替
役所
加改
(Translation: Settsu Province Amagasaki Scrip An'ei six Fire Rooster year Silver Ten Monme Amagasaki Exchange Office)
Reverse description Plain black ink on an otherwise blank ground, with a vertical handwritten inscription in sōsho (Chinese cursive script) running along the central field. A black oval handstamp seal is applied at the upper right, and a green fundō-shaped (weight-form) handstamp seal appears at the middle right.
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Comments

Amagasaki was a small fudai domain in Settsu Province held by the Toda clan, and like most han of modest size, it ran its own paper currency — hansatsu — as a practical workaround to chronic coin shortages. The 10 monme denomination places this note within the silver-unit system common to western Japanese domains, where monme weights rather than copper coin counts governed day-to-day exchange.

The "additional print" designation almost certainly refers to an overprint authorizing reissue or extending the note's validity period — a routine but telling detail. Han authorities frequently overstamped exhausted emissions rather than printing fresh paper, a sign that the domain's finances left little room for new production runs.