Ancient Chinese gold refers to gold, brass or bronze?

Updated on culture 2024-03-27
15 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Ancient gold mostly refers to copper alloys, Jiajing of the Ming Dynasty.

    Previously it referred to bronze or red copper.

    After Jiajing in the Ming Dynasty, it generally referred to metal brass.

    It can also be called red gold.

    "Gold" also has the meaning of money and copper in the ancient interpretation, and the currency in circulation at that time was naturally dominated by copper, and copper was also a precious metal in ancient times!

    For example: where the method of using soldiers, galloping thousands of cars, leather cars thousands of rides, with 100,000 armor, thousands of miles of food; The internal and external expenses, the use of guests, the material of glue paint, the dedication of the car armor, the daily cost of thousands of gold, and then the division of 100,000 yuan. - Sun Tzu

    For more information, please refer to Encyclopedia's explanation.

    **Generally called directly**.

    In ancient times, what bounty was 10,000 taels, it was generally 10,000 taels of brass, not chased by aunts**!! <

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    China is an agricultural country, and the answer is the gold recorded in the ancient books, that is, **, and the distinction between gold and copper in ancient China is very clear. Those who say that the gold cake recorded in the ancient books is copper do not want to think about why the copper cake was not dug up in the Han tomb.

    The reason why so many large quantities of gold transactions can be recorded in ancient books is because gold in ancient China (before the Han Dynasty) was not valuable.

    The industry is not developed, so gold is more used to make various ** utensils, and the function of acting as a general equivalent is very weak. Historical records. In the Han Dynasty, one catty could be exchanged for three catties. **One eridium, equivalent to 300 grams today, is only enough to exchange for 10 sacks of millet.

    So the ruling class at that time did not take ** seriously. (Similarly, some Indian tribes in North America did not regard ** as a very valuable thing before the colonists came) The ancient rulers rewarded their subordinates for various historical events, although they were not a few hundred catties at every turn, but they were not actually worth much when converted into grain.

    With the passage of time, commodity trading has become more and more developed, and ** as a symbol of wealth and a means of payment has become more and more scarce. No one will be willing to spend a lot of money.

    In fact, there was no more gold in ancient China than in foreign countries, whether it was the Han Dynasty or Rome, and the treasury had a total of 100,200 tons of gold reserves. For example, when the Han Book was written, it was recorded that the ** reserves of the treasury during the heyday of the Han Dynasty were 270 tons, and the reserves of the Roman treasury in the same period were 179 tons, and the two were basically about the same <>

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The following is the inscription of Ligui, also known as King Wu's Zhengshang, unearthed by archaeological excavations, early Western Zhou Dynasty, national treasure heavy weapon.

    King Wu is a businessman. Shokazi Dynasty. Years of Ding. Faint. There is a business to be done. Xinwei. Wang Ziyanshi. Yi and Lijin. Use Chayang Gongbao to honor Yi.

    The gist is that we have overturned the Shang Dynasty, so happy, so happy, this king gave Li (personal name) gold. Then Li made this piece with the "gold" rewarded by the warrior king. (The interpretation of individual words in the inscription is controversial, but it is generally not bad).

    This piece is bronze, and the "gold" it says certainly refers to copper, to be precise, it is a copper alloy, ironclad evidence, alas, copper proof.

    So it's safe to say that the "gold" in the Bronze Age meant "copper", although there was also what is now called gold.

    As for the future, no praise or answer. The mobile phone is purely hand-called. <>

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Is it iron?

    The "thousand gold" in idioms such as "one word thousand gold", "one promise thousand gold", and "a thousand gold is difficult to buy an inch of time" does not refer to a thousand catties of gold, but brass. Money has the property of a general equivalent, and the best general equivalent is ***. In very early antiquity, the yield of ** was very low.

    This kind of metal that is too expensive and scarce can only be used by princes and nobles, and there is no way to circulate it. Brass was also a very valuable metal at that time, and the output was much larger than gold, and the value was high, so brass was widely circulated in the portable society. The word "gold" was originally a monetary unit in ancient times, a gold in the Qin Dynasty was 20 taels, and in the Han Dynasty, one catty (16 taels) was a gold, and a gold was a metaphor for the meaning of 1 catty of brass.

    With the development of society, the output of the first came up, and it replaced brass as the first currency. "

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Now when the word gold is mentioned, people can't help but think of wealth, ** and the like, even in ancient China, there was also the appearance of gold, for example, in ancient times, when the big official rewarded the seal, the bounty was ten thousand taels and the like, but in ancient times, there was no high level of modern industry, and the composition of gold at that time was really the gold now? Or is it just gold or something like that?

    In fact, in our country, in different eras, because of the development of science and technology, the definition of this thing is different, in the Spring and Autumn Period of our country, ** refers to bronze and other things, what I called ** after the Han Dynasty began to be similar to the current **, but the purity is not as high as it is now!

    Compared with **, ** and copper coins are the main resources that occupy most of the currency circulation in ancient China. The use rate of ** is not high, especially in the Eastern Han Dynasty, ** was not used for a time, and in the Ming and Qing dynasties, the meaning of gold in addition to being a noun for **, is also a unit of measurement, if a gold usually refers to one or two **, and if one or two ** then its actual meaning refers to one or two **!

    With the development of modern science and technology, the tradition of using money has gradually disappeared, and it is more used as an ornament in people's daily life, whether it is women's jewelry, necklaces, or men's rings, many of which are created by **, and a country needs a lot of **reserves, from the reserves of funds as a country**!

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    It depends on the **, as the currency in circulation, it refers to the **, which is basically brass.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    It should be**, the ancient smelting technology is not very developed, brass or something should not be mentioned often, and most of the things seen in film and television dramas refer to**.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    At a stage of China's historical development, the meaning of gold and silver is not the same, in the Western Han Dynasty, Beijing is actually just bronze.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Ancient gold refers to gold. But its content was not as pure as it is now, so it may be mistaken for **. That's why I think so.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    This gold is what we now refer to as brass, but although the dynasty has changed, the metal refining ability is more advanced, so the follow-up is really **.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    In ancient times, gold should be **, and at that time** seemed to be very much. At that time, copper did not seem to be very popular, and it was not discovered at first.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Personally, I think that the gold mentioned in ancient times should refer to **, after all, in ancient times there were gold bars, gold cakes, horseshoe gold and so on.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    I think the gold in the past refers to **, after all, gold is still very valuable, but maybe the gold at that time was not as pure as it is now.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    At that time, they only knew gold, and they didn't know what copper was, but the gold they were talking about might be copper today.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    I feel that it should be solved that it is not gold or copper, it should be regarded as something gold, and it is not now said that I know**.

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