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For much of the pre-modern period, the Chinese economy ran on a combination of [[silver]] and [[copper]] coins. Coins were minted in China since at least the 4th century BCE, originally in a knife-like shape, acquiring a standard form of a circular coin with a square hole in the center from the [[Han Dynasty]] onwards. Paper money ("[[flying cash]]") was first developed and circulated in the 11th century or so.
 
For much of the pre-modern period, the Chinese economy ran on a combination of [[silver]] and [[copper]] coins. Coins were minted in China since at least the 4th century BCE, originally in a knife-like shape, acquiring a standard form of a circular coin with a square hole in the center from the [[Han Dynasty]] onwards. Paper money ("[[flying cash]]") was first developed and circulated in the 11th century or so.
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Silver was used for large purchases, while copper was used for smaller purchases. The Chinese government minted massive numbers of coins, especially in the [[Song Dynasty]], in such large amounts that they came to be widely used throughout the region, and survive in great numbers today, going back even as far as the Han Dynasty.
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Silver was used for large purchases, while copper was used for smaller purchases. The Chinese government minted massive numbers of coins, especially in the [[Song Dynasty]], in such large amounts (several hundred million coins over the course of the dynasty)<ref>Richard von Glahn, "The Ningbo-Hakata Merchant Network and the Reorientation of East Asian Maritime Trade, 1150-1350," ''Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies''  74:2 (2014), 251.</ref> that they came to be widely used throughout the region, and survive in great numbers today, going back even as far as the Han Dynasty.
    
==Copper==
 
==Copper==
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