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A penny (i.e., a standard copper coin with a square hole).
One or two** one or two**.
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A penny (i.e., a standard copper coin with a square hole).
One or two** one or two**.
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.
Exchange relationship Copper coins, the exchange ratio between ** and ** is like the current foreign exchange**, which is often changing, not as clear as 1 yuan is equal to 100 points. According to the following description:
The ratio of gold and silver doubled from 1:8** around 1600 to 1:10 in the mid and late 20th centuries and to 1:20 by the end of the 18th century. ”
It can be known that 1 tael** can be exchanged for 8 11 taels**. And again:
In the early years of Daoguang, one or two ** exchanged money for one hanging, that is, one thousand Wen; By the time of the 20-year Opium War in Daoguang, one or two ** could be exchanged for 16,700 yuan. Since Xianfeng, the price of silver has risen sharply, and one or two ** can be exchanged for as much as 2,2300 yuan. ”
It can be known that under normal circumstances, 1 tael ** can be exchanged for about 1000 1500 copper coins, and in ancient times, it was usually said that 1 guan money or 1 hanging money was 1000 yuan.
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In ancient times, 1 tael = 10 money.
In ancient China, millet was used as the unit of weight.
Han Dynasty and Jin Dynasty: 1 Jin = 16 taels, 1 tael = 4 points, 1 point = 6 baht, 1 baht = 10 millet.
Song Dynasty: 1 Jin = 16 taels, 1 tael = 10 money, 1 money = 10 points, 1 point = 10 centi, 1 centi= 10 milli.
The Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties followed the Song system and did not change.
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In ancient times, 1 tael = 10 money.
In ancient China, millet was used as the unit of weight.
Han Dynasty and Jin Dynasty: 1 Jin = 16 taels, 1 tael = 4 points, 1 point = 6 baht, 1 baht = 10 millet.
Song Dynasty: 1 Jin = 16 taels, 1 tael = 10 money, 1 money = 10 points, 1 point = 10 centi, 1 centi= 10 milli.
The Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties followed the Song system and did not change.
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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. It can be seen from here that the exchange rate of gold and silver is about 1:10, but gold and silver are expensive and copper coins are cheap, and the exchange rate of silver and copper 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 "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 its 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, Wen: the name of the basic unit of the coin, a small flat coin is called a Wen. 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.
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1. It can usually be understood as: 1 tael ** = 10 taels ** = 10 copper coins = 10,000 copper coins. One tael is 10 bucks, and one buckle is two.
An ingot of silver is a piece of silver, and the ingot is used for ingots. Only say one ingot, and the ingots of the Ming and Qing dynasties are all fixed weight, about one tael, two taels, five taels, ten taels, twenty taels and so on.
2. According to the above calculations, it is further considered that: ** is more stable than others, and should be referred; **It has been used as an industrial product, so the reference value is low; Due to the relatively rapid development of agricultural technology, food is relatively much cheaper than in ancient times; Respect for the ancient exchange ratios; The following conversion system is used:
1 tael** = RMB 2,000 = 10 taels**.
1 tael** = RMB 200 = 1000 Wen Qian = 1 Guan (hanging) money.
1 Wen Qian = Chinese Yuan.
In addition: 1 stone meter = 1 tael **.
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One tael is equal to ten cents, and one catty is equal to 16 taels.
The ancient weighing system has undergone many changes, and it has been generally stable since the Ming Dynasty, with small changes, and a catty is basically about 595g. Until 1929, the measurement reform was implemented, and the old system of 595g per catty was changed to 500g per catty. In this way, from the Ming Dynasty to 1979, the correct formula for converting money to grams should be 595 16 10, and 1 money is approximately equal to grams.
In the early days of the founding of the People's Republic of China, one catty was equal to 16 taels, and one tael was equal to ten cents. "Money" is converted to "gram", and the conversion method commonly used by people is 500g (1 catty) 16 (16 taels for one catty in the old system) 10 (10 taels for one tael in the old system) = money), and this is also the case in some textbooks of traditional Chinese medicine schools, in fact, this conversion method is flawed.
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It depends on the period. Two ** = 10 taels ** = 10 copper coins = 10,000 copper coins.
Although the mutual exchange rate of gold, silver and copper has been fluctuating, this assumption should basically be reasonable. Mr. Wang Zengyu, an expert on contemporary Song Dynasty history, in the chapter 7 "Overcoming the Xianghan" in Chapter 7 of his "New Biography of Yue Fei", once mentioned that the imperial court had in the provincial document given to Yue Fei: "Fourth, pay 60,000 stone rice and 400,000 guan money for military supplies.
The four hundred thousand taels of silver were converted into one hundred thousand taels of silver and five thousand taels of gold, and gold and silver were not yet used as independent currencies." It can be seen that 400,000 copper coins in the early Southern Song Dynasty are equivalent to 100,000 taels of silver and 5,000 taels of gold, which basically conforms to the above assumption in terms of order of magnitude.
In this way, you can convert it according to the gold and silver ** of the market.
One or two gold is 50 grams, and now it is about 280 yuan per gram, which is about 14,000 yuan.
One or two pieces of silver is 50 grams, and now it's about 9 yuan per gram, which is about 450 yuan
Of course, the ancient exchange rate is not comparable now, Tang money gold and silver are very valuable, the Ming and Qing dynasties, especially after Qianlong to Jiaqing in the Qing Dynasty, the price of gold and silver, especially silver, is very low, because the output is very large.
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History records that during the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, one tael of silver could buy two stones of rice of general quality, and one stone at that time was about kilograms, and one or two pieces of silver could buy kilograms of rice, which was catties. Now the rice eaten by the average family in China is between one catty and 2 yuan, and the middle price can be calculated as one tael of silver = RMB yuan in the Ming Dynasty.
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1 tael = 10 money.
Today, one-tenth of a pound is one tael, and one tael is ten dollars.
In ancient times, twenty-four baht was one tael, and sixteen taels were one catty. Today, one-tenth of a pound is one tael, and one tael is ten dollars.
Huainanzi Tianwen Xun": "Twelve baht and when half a tael, the balance has about it, because of the double, so twenty-four baht is one tael." Han Liu Xiang "Saying Yuan, Distinguishing Things":
Sixteen millet is one bean, six beans are one baht, twenty-four baht weighs one tael, and sixteen taels are one catty. "History of the Song Dynasty and the Chronicles of the Law I": "One and two, equivalent to twenty-four baht, is two thousand four hundred pounds.
2) Ancient cloth, with the ancient ruler and two zhang as one end and two ends as one or two. "The Twenty-sixth Year of Zhao Gong" "With two taels of coins and brocade, the binding is as good as a yao, and it is suitable for the teacher" Jin Du pre-note: "Two zhang is one end, and the two ends are one tael, and the horse is also."
Zhou Li, Diguan, Matchmaker" "Where a son marries a wife, the currency is pure silk, no more than five taels" Tang Jia Gongyan Shu: "The ancients rolled up at the two ends of each other, a total of one tael. ”
Now the weights and measures are converted: 1 tael = kilogram.
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One tael = ten cents.
Lianghe money is a unit of weight. Today, one-tenth of a pound is one tael, and one tael is ten dollars.
One coin is the smallest unit of weight, and it is still used in traditional Chinese medicine prescriptions, **, and recipes. In the early days of the founding of the People's Republic of China, one catty was equal to 16 taels, and one tael was equal to ten cents. In real life, it usually means that something is insignificant and will not affect the overall situation, such as: it is worthless.
Since January 1, 1979, the unit of measurement of traditional Chinese medicine has also been changed to the rice system, using "grams, milligrams, liters, milliliters", instead of "two, money, cents", etc.
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: 1 tael** = RMB 2000 = 10 taels** 1 tael** = RMB 200 = 1000 Wen Qian = 1 Guan (hanging) money 1 Wen Qian = RMB Yuan Gu is 24 baht for one tael, and 16 taels for one catty. Today, one-tenth of a pound is one tael, and one tael is ten dollars.
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Each dynasty is different, one tael of silver in the Tang Dynasty is equivalent to 2,500 yuan, one tael of silver in the Song Dynasty is equivalent to 250 yuan, one tael of silver in the Ming Dynasty is equivalent to 500 yuan, and one tael of silver in the Qing Dynasty is about equal to 200 yuan.
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In the past, one tael was equal to sixteen cents, so there was a saying that half a catty and eight taels.
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Not only in ancient times, but also in modern monetary units, 1 tael is also 10 coins.
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From ancient times to the present, it is one tael = 10 money.
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