''); length 2.6 cm; Palou Tello,
Batu Islands, Indonesia In
China, cowries were so important that many characters relating to money or trade contain the character for cowry
貝 as a component (e.g. 價 "price", 費 "to spend", 買 "to buy", 財 "wealth", 貨 "commodities"). Starting over three thousand years ago, cowry shells, or copies of the shells, were used as
Chinese currency. The
Classical Chinese character radical for "money/currency", , originated as a pictograph of a cowrie shell. Cowries or
kaudi were used as means of exchange in
India since ancient times up to around 1830. In
Bengal, they were exchanged at a rate of 2560 to a
rupee. Another exchange rate had 4 cowries equal 1 ganda, 5 gandas equal 1 budis, 4 budis equal 1 pana, 16 panas equal 1 kahan, and 10 kahanas equal 1 tanka/rupee). The annual importation in early 19th century
Bengal from
the Maldives was valued at about 30,000 rupees. A single slave would sell for 25,000 cowries. In
Orissa, India, the use of the
kaudi was abolished by the British
East India Company in 1805 in favour of silver. This was one of the causes of the
Paik Rebellion in 1817. In
Southeast Asia, when the value of the Siamese
tical (
baht) was about half a troy ounce of silver (about 16 grams), the value of the cowrie (
bia) was fixed at baht. ==Oceania and Australia==