-
inscribed "CHINA" in both
Latin and
Chinese characters, and
denominated in
candareens.
Postage stamps and
postal history of China#Imperial
China Chinese units...
- five-cent piece, e.g., chat fan yi (七分二 "seven
candareens, two cash") or saam fan luk (三分六 "three
candareens and six cash"). The
Xinhua News
Agency reported...
- Asia that was also used as a
currency denomination. It is
equal to 10
candareens and is 1⁄10 of a tael or
approximately 3.78 grams. A troy mace is approximately...
-
denominated in tael. The yuan was
valued at 0.72 tael, (or 7 mace and 2
candareens).
Banknotes were
issued in yuan
denominations from the 1890s by several...
-
reckoning money, is tael, (leang,)
which is
divided into mace, (tseen,)
candareens, (fun,) and cash, (le.) The
relative value of
these terms, both among...
-
Chinese dollar (yuan)
coins it
states the
words 7 mace and 2
candareens. The mace and
candareen were sub-divisions of the tael unit of weight.
Banknotes tended...
- (weights based) 1 Yuan (元 / 圓) = 7 mace and 2
candareens (七錢二分) 1 Tael (兩) = 10 mace (錢) = 100
candareens (分) = 1000 cash (厘 / 釐)
Silver (standardised...
- and
casting process Mother coin
Ancestor coin Near
modern Cash (wén)
Candareen (fēn) Mace (qián) Tael (liǎng) Yuan
Historical exonumia Charms and amulets...
- the táhil, and the táïl. The fun is more
often known in
English as the
candareen. It also
sometimes appears as the kondúrí or konderi.
Although monme is...
-
inscribed "CHINA" in both
Latin and
Chinese characters, and
denominated in
candareens. Initially, all mail to
foreign destinations went
through Shanghai, but...