How much is the current two pieces of gold in ancient times?

Updated on history 2024-04-27
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    How can something from ancient times be compared to the present?

    For example, if you take your current mobile phone back to ancient times, how much gold do you think it's worth?

    So it can't be compared.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    I'd lie to you if I told you! In fact, gold was equivalent to a general equivalent at that time, and had different values in different dynasties, so you can't say it, but you can calculate it according to the rarity of things, based on the current price of gold, and the current mining volume, although it is not accurate, but you can also know the approximate.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    In ancient times, one tael was equal to three coins, then, one tael ** was equal to three coins**.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    1 tael ** = 10 taels ** = 10 copper coins = 10,000 copper coins.

    The gold was estimated at 20,000 in the past, but now it is estimated at 8,000" (Food and Goods Journal), and one or two gold were exchanged for 10 to 8 guan. According to the record of the "Three Dynasties and the Northern Alliance", in the first year of Jingkang (1126) of the Northern Song Dynasty, the price of gold was 20 yuan per tael, and the price of silver was 500 wen per tael.

    Yue Fei's grandson Yue Ke's "Jin Tuo Continuation" records that in the fourth year of Shaoxing in the Southern Song Dynasty (1134), silver was 300 wen every 22 runs, and gold was 20 or 30 runs. From here, it can be seen that the exchange rate of gold and silver is almost 1:10, but gold and silver are expensive and copper coins are cheap, and the exchange rate of almost silver and silver is about 1 pair of 2.

    Extended Materials. After Qin Shi Huang unified China, he also unified the currency. Abolish coins such as knives, cloth, and shellfish, and use "half taels" as currency.

    That is, with the later garden-shaped square hole copper coin of the Qin State, the text is cast "half a tael", weighing 12 baht (one tael is 24 baht), and it is called the "half tael" copper coin that is as heavy as the text. Since then, this kind of "half tael" evolved from round hole ring money has been circulating in China for more than 2,000 years.

    Big money: the general name of large face value and large money, the standard size of five baht money in the Six Dynasties is called big money, text: the name of the basic unit of the coin, a pin of small flat money called a text. Guan: 1,000 thorium is called through, and the square wooden strip worn in the money hole in the money casting place is also called through.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    It can usually be understood as: 1 tael ** = 10 taels ** = 100 coins ** = 10,000 copper coins.

    A silver ingot, an ingot is actually a measure word, that is, a piece of silver. The ingots are used on ingots, and only one ingot. The ingots of the Ming and Qing dynasties are all fixed weights, about one tael, two taels, five taels, ten taels, twenty taels and so on.

    There are many ancient monetary units in China, and there are differences between dynasties, especially before the Qin and Han dynasties.

    Commonly used, however, there are the following three units: a penny (i.e., a standard square-hole copper coin), one tael**, and one tael**. Although the above units are different from dynasty to dynasty, at least there is little difference after the Tang and Song dynasties, so relatively stable and credible data can be obtained.

    However, the exchange ratio between copper coins in different periods, ** and **, like the current foreign exchange**, is constantly changing.

    The approximate ratio is this:

    Consistent money, in ancient times, it was usually said that 1 guan money or 1 hanging money was 1000 Wen. And the exchange varies from dynasty to dynasty.

    One tael**, one tael** is usually equivalent to 1000-1500 Wen.

    One tael**, while one tael ** for ** varies from 8-20 taels.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The ratio of gold to silver in the Qing Dynasty was one to eight, one tael for eight taels.

    In the Western Han Dynasty, one catty can only be exchanged for three catties; In the Wei and Jin dynasties, one catty could be exchanged for ten catties; In the Northern Song Dynasty, one catty can be exchanged for thirteen catties; On the eve of the Opium War, one catty can already be exchanged for thirty catties.

    The profit-seeking behavior of merchants led to the flow of goods from east to west and from west to east, and as a result, China was greatly reduced and greatly increased. Due to the difficulties of transportation in ancient times, and the difference in the international price of commodities was greater than the difference in price comparison, merchants were willing to sell rare and exotic goods from various countries with greater profits instead of gold and silver.

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Hello, glad you asked.

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