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100 Mon Mikawa

发行方 Japan
年份 1730
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面值 登录 以查看详情
货币 登录 以查看详情
材质 Paper
尺寸 登录 以查看详情
形状 登录 以查看详情
印刷机构 登录 以查看详情
设计师 登录 以查看详情
雕刻师 登录 以查看详情
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正面描述 The upper portion carries a vignette of the goddess Benzaiten, a deity associated with wealth and fortune. Below the vignette, a vertical arrangement of text panels bears the denomination inscription in classical Chinese characters. A red circular seal with a square central perforation — evoking the form of a traditional cash coin — appears as an authenticating stamp.
正面铭文 登录 以查看详情
背面描述 登录 以查看详情
背面铭文 享    應
保 ◯◯ 楮
十 ◯◯ 數
五 ◯◯ 換
穐 ◯◯ 國
初 ◯◯ 產
鏤    品
所替引州河
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防伪类型 登录 以查看详情
防伪描述 登录 以查看详情
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Mikawa Province han notes occupy an interesting corner of Edo-period monetary history. The Tokugawa shogunate permitted individual domains to issue their own paper currency — hansatsu — for circulation strictly within their boundaries, a deliberate policy of monetary fragmentation that kept economic power decentralized. Mikawa, as a province with particular symbolic resonance as the ancestral home of the Tokugawa clan itself, was no exception to this system.

The 160 × 37 mm strip format is characteristic of hansatsu production, typically block-printed on washi using locally sourced mulberry fiber. Official domain seals functioned as the primary authentication device — sophisticated counterfeiting was rare not because it was technically difficult but because a forged note was only useful within a single domain, dramatically limiting the incentive.