The Northwest Anhui Soviet was one of dozens of short-lived Communist base areas established in the early 1930s as the Chinese Red Army fragmented across rural central China following Chiang Kai-shek's encirclement campaigns. Local soviets struck their own coinage partly out of necessity — Nationalist currency was distrusted or unavailable — and partly as a deliberate assertion of parallel governmental authority. Most issues from these soviets were produced in extremely limited quantities using improvised equipment.
KM#1 status here is somewhat misleading; the coin's attribution and die origins remain subjects of ongoing specialist debate, with some researchers questioning whether surviving examples are period strikes or later reproductions made for the collector market.
The Northwest Anhui Soviet was one of dozens of short-lived Communist base areas established in the early 1930s as the Chinese Red Army fragmented across rural central China following Chiang Kai-shek's encirclement campaigns. Local soviets struck their own coinage partly out of necessity — Nationalist currency was distrusted or unavailable — and partly as a deliberate assertion of parallel governmental authority. Most issues from these soviets were produced in extremely limited quantities using improvised equipment.
KM#1 status here is somewhat misleading; the coin's attribution and die origins remain subjects of ongoing specialist debate, with some researchers questioning whether surviving examples are period strikes or later reproductions made for the collector market.