'' (串, a string of cash coins) or 1000 cash The
wen was one of the chief units of currency in China and was used to denominate both coins and paper money. Other denominations were used, including various weights, based on the
tael system, for
sycee silver and gold ingots. Chinese currency started 3000-4500 years ago but no one is quite sure. Until the 19th century, coins denominated in wen were cast, the most common formation being the round-shaped copper coin with a square or circular hole in the centre. A string of 1000 wén was supposed to be equal in value to one
tael (
liǎng) of pure
silver. Each string of cash was divided in ten sections of 100. The person who strung the cash into a string took one, two, or three cash per hundred, depending on local custom, as payment for his effort. So, in fact, an ounce of silver could vary in exchange from 970 to 990 cash (or more) between two places fairly close together. In places in the North where there was a shortage of coinage a string of 500 exchanged for an ounce of silver. Paper money sometimes showed pictures of the appropriate number of 1 wén coins strung together. In the 19th century, foreign coins began to circulate widely in China, particularly silver coins such as the
Mexican peso. In 1889, Chinese currency began to be denominated in the
yuan and its subdivisions. The cash or wén was retained in this system as yuan. Traditional style, cast 1 wén coins continued to be produced until the end of the
Chinese Empire in 1911. The last coins denominated in cash were struck in the early years of the
Republic of China in 1924. The term is still used today in colloquial
Cantonese (
mān), but written as to represent
Hong Kong dollars. == Coins ==