Facebook Twitter 新浪微博 google plus Instagram YouTube Wednesday 2 September 2015
Search
Archive
English
English>>Culture

Cambridge University displays ancient Chinese banknote made from mulberry bark

(Chinanews.com)    16:23, September 02, 2015
Email|Print

A Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) banknote.

A batch of cultural relics including a Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) banknote issued in 1380 is on display in the Cambridge University library, Xinhua reports.

The note is made from the bark of a mulberry tree, worth 1,000 copper coins at the time. Text on the note states that it could be used worldwide, and that counterfeiters would be beheaded and those who expose them rewarded 25 oz in silver.

The university said in a statement that paper notes were first adopted in China about 4,700 years ago, 500 years earlier than in Europe and that they were widely circulated in the 11th century.

Oracle bones dating back 3000 years, together with ancient calligraphy and paintings, are also on show.

(For the latest China news, Please follow People's Daily on Twitter and Facebook)(Editor:Yao Chun,Liang Jun)

Add your comment

Related reading

We Recommend

Most Viewed

Day|Week

Key Words