- The
Joseon Tongbo (Korean: 조선통보; Hanja: 朝鮮通寶) was an
inscription used on
Korean cash
coins during the
Joseon period first from 1423
until 1425 and later...
- sta**** in use
until 1892.
Prior to the mun, cash
coins with the
inscriptions tongbo (通寶) and
jungbo (重寶) and
silver vases called ŭnbyŏng were used as currency...
-
coins were minted. The coins, cast in both
bronze and iron, were
called tongbo and jungbo. Additionally,
silver vases called ŭnbyŏng were
widely used and...
-
numismatic charms became less common. In some
instances regular Sangpyeong Tongbo [ko] (Hanja: 常平通寶) cash
coins were
turned into
amulets by
making their outer...
-
Milchwissenschaft (in German). 35 (8): 457–460. Wang, Zhiying; Hu, ****feng; Zhu,
Tongbo; Zheng, Jins****; Gänzle,
Michael G.; Simpson,
David J. (31
August 2021)...
- cash
coins could be
strung together and
enter circulation. The
Sangpyeong Tongbo [ko] (常平通寶) cash
coins were
known as
yeopjeon (葉錢, "leaf coins") because...
-
Shingi Tongbo (新起通寶) and the
reverse inscription O Baek (五百,
written from left to right),
these Chinese characters indicate that each
Shingi Tongbo token...
-
Among the
coins issued by Goryeo, such as the
Dongguk Tongbo,
Samhan Tongbo, and
Haedong Tongbo,
about a
hundred variants are known.
Coins failed to gain...
-
Thousand Character classic were used on the
reverse sides of some
Sangpyeong Tongbo [ko] cash
coins of the
Korean mun
currency to
indicate furnace or "series"...
-
modeled after the Tang dynasty's
kaiyuan tongbao (開元通寶). The
resulting Joseon tongbo (조선통보; 朝鮮通寶) was a
bronze coin,
backed by a
silver standard, with 150 coins...