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No, it was originally a shell, then it was bronze in the Shang and Zhou dynasties, and then it was copper after the Qin Dynasty, and then it was the paper money of the Song Dynasty, and the ** of the Ming and Qing dynasties.
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Since the Qin Dynasty, there have been round square hole coins minted in ** As for the currency before the Qin Dynasty, it should be ** but it will not be stone.
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Shellfish was originally used as currency in ancient times. Therefore, many of the current Chinese characters involve consumption, and the radical "bei" is in them.
Later, there were bronzes, and there were coins made of bronze.
In ancient times, there was also a period when ** was used as currency.
Later, in order to be more convenient to use and uniformly measured, paper money was introduced.
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Shells, knife coins, jiaozi, copper coins, gold ingots, silver ingots, etc., at the beginning there was no currency but barter, and some inconvenient to carry will have vouchers: for example, a stone is made in half and then as long as it can be combined. I don't know if this counts as currency, anyway, I haven't heard of using stone as official currency, and the Stone Age used stone to make ** ......Scold!
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In ancient China, five baht coins appeared in the Qin Dynasty, and knife coins appeared in the Wei Kingdom, which were basically made of bronze. By the end of the Qing Dynasty, when Yuan Shikai became emperor, coins with celebrity heads on the obverse (e.g., the coin with Yuan Shikai's head on the obverse) had appeared
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The use of stone is more valuable stones, jade and the like.
Antiquity.
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In the past, gold and silver were used, and the earliest paper money "Jiaozi" appeared after the Song Dynasty, and then developed to today's RMB.
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Shellfish were first used in ancient times.
Later bronze coinage.
In ancient times, there was also a period when ** was used as currency.
There is also Jiaozi.
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Shellfish were used as currency in ancient times.
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There are shells, there are stones, and there are metals
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1. Seashells. Haibei is the earliest currency in ancient China, because of its strong and wear-resistant, smooth and beautiful, easy to carry and has the characteristics of natural units, it served as a medium of commodity exchange, that is, the most primitive currency.
2、**。As a major currency, it has been active in China for more than 1,000 years, and it can be seen in some indemnity treaties signed by the Qing Dynasty, such as the indemnity of 100 million ** in the "Xinchou Treaty". This also reflects from the side that it used to be a hard currency on the international market.
3. Bronze. For example, the knife coins in the Qiyan region, the ring coins in the Sanjin and Zhou regions, and the cloth coins in the Yellow River Valley during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period.
The cloth coin evolved from bronze agricultural tools, and was a shovel-shaped copper coin that circulated in the Central Plains during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period of China. Shovel-shaped tools used to be a medium for private transactions, so the earliest coinage was minted in the shape of a shovel.
4. Paper. During the Northern Song Dynasty, the world's earliest paper money appeared, Jiaozi, and then other paper money appeared: Huizi and Guanzi, and their position became more and more important.
5. Silk silk. As early as the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, silk silk was often used to exchange various goods. In the Han Dynasty, when the issuance of copper coins several times led to credibility, silk silk was the most trusted wealth of the people. The Cao Wei Empire in the Three Kingdoms even abolished all copper coins for a time, and used silk for trading in the market.
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Shellfish is the earliest cargo in China.
Copper is the earliest monetary metal in China, and has been in circulation until the 30s of the last century, gold as currency, starting from the pre-Qin period and ending in the Eastern Han Dynasty.
**, which already appeared in the writings of the Western Han Dynasty, but did not gradually become a material for goods until the Song Dynasty. In parallel circulation with copper, silver was in circulation as the main coin until the 30s of the last century.
Worldwide, ancient Persia, ancient India, and ancient Italy all have records of using cattle and sheep as currency. In Homer's epic poems, cattle are often used to indicate the value of objects. In addition to cloud livestock, Ethiopia used salt as currency; In the Americas, tobacco, cocoa beans, etc., used to be ancient currencies.
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The answer downstairs is incomplete, and the materials that have been used for currency are, shells, animal bones, copper coins, cloth coins (made of cloth), iron coins, gold, silver, and paper (Jiaozi). Most other things are not considered currencies as general equivalents, and the order in which they are typed is the order in which various currencies appear.
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Shells, copper knife coins, copper coins, silver ingots, paper money,
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Shells, metals (gold, silver, copper), salt.
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The earliest currency in China was the seashell. Haibei is found in the prehistoric Yangshao culture, Longshan culture, Dawenkou cultural sites, in the Erlitou cultural sites and Shang and Zhou tombs within the Xia Dynasty chronology. Seashells are a beautiful and precious ornament produced in the warm sea of the south.
It began to play a monetary role, which seems to be traced back to the Xia Dynasty, when China entered the class society and the emergence of the state. During the Shang and Western Zhou dynasties, it was already the main currency in circulation. In the late Shang Dynasty and the Western Zhou Dynasty, there were also copper imitation shells without writing.
In the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, it developed into an inscriptioned copper shell ant nose coin, forming a formal metal coinage, which was mainly circulated in the southern Chu region.
The other earliest forms of currency were copper coins, knives, and knives. Money and pun were agricultural tools, and knives were tools for many purposes, and they were also the property of people to make transfers, and they were unearthed in the Yin Zhou or earlier sites. Probably in the late Yin Shang and Western Zhou dynasties, these copper tools formed general equivalents in different regions.
Qian and plutonium developed into full-time currency in the Spring and Autumn Period, which is what later generations called empty shoubu; Although the basic structure of the bronze shovel is preserved, there is a slender chisel, but it is no longer suitable for wooden handles, can not be used as tools, and has become a typical pre-Qin coinage. By the Warring States period, it was further developed into cloth coins with slightly spade-shaped small copper sheets, which were mainly circulated in the northern Zhou, Jin, Zheng and Wei regions. The bronze knife developed into a knife coin from the Eastern Zhou Dynasty to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, which was mainly circulated in the Qi State and the Yan and Zhao regions.
In China's Shang Dynasty, shells have begun to be used as currency, with the development of commodity economy, natural shells as currency gradually in short supply, so there are artificial shell coins, such as stone shell coins, bone shell coins, mussel coins, etc. By the late Shang Dynasty, copper metal shell coins appeared.
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Shellfish is one of the early Chinese physical currencies, and as early as the end of the Xia Dynasty, shellfish may have become a medium of exchange. In the Shang Dynasty, it was common to have a kind of tooth shell, the back of which was often smoothed or drilled through to make it easy to carry, and its scientific name was "cargo shell".
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How ancient are you talking about?
If you talk about the Stone Age, you can use shells as currency
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At the beginning it was shells and so on.
Later it was copper coins, silver, and gold.
This is followed by silver bills (banknotes).
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Gold, silver, copper, paper, and earlier shell coins.
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Shells, knife coins, copper coins, gold and silver.
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Xia, Shang: Shell coin.
Zhou: Fish coin. Qin: Qin half two.
Han, Three Kingdoms, Jin, Northern and Southern Dynasties, Sui: Five baht money.
Tang: Kaiyuan Tongbao.
Song: Gold, silver, copper coins, paper money.
Yuan: Da Yuan Tongbao, banknotes.
Ming: Ming silver dollar.
Qing: Daqing Longyang.
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Shells, gold, silver, copper, Jiaozi (Song, banknotes).
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In ancient times, shells were used, and bronze was used in some civilizations, and the round square hole was mostly female money.
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Gold, silver, copper coins were used as currency.
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In ancient times, sheep and shells were used as currency.
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