Lot 2070

Sale 115 · Important Australian, Ancient British & World Coins, Medals & Banknotes

Description

China, tea brick, with Chinese inscription below (237 x 187mm), issued under the People's Republic of China, 1949-1990s, made by the Yangloadong Brick Tea Factory, being a common form of commodity based money used in international exchange illustrating it was distinct from trusting government as was the case with Chinese coins; obv. the design displays an ornate arch flanked by trees; five stars above; below, "Zhongguo Chaye Gongsi/ Yanglaodong Zhuancha Chang Zhizao" (China National Tea Corporation/ Made by the Yanglaodong Brick Tea Factory) in H…nz characters, rev. Sixteen segments, (237 x 187mm), (1110 g), (Mitchener 4144; Opitz p.338-40). Extremely fine and rare.

Ex Patrick J. O'Rourke Collection.

From the late 19th to the mid 20th century, tea was commonly pressed into bricks for trade in Russia and Tibet, where they frequently functioned as currency. The quality of this tea varied from pure ground leaves for the best bricks and dust, stems, and soot for the lesser brands. These bricks, proved to be so important to the Tibetan economy that, in the build up to the Chinese invasion of the country in 1950, the Communist government purchased all of the available tea bricks, severely disrupting Tibetan monetary exchange.

Estimate
$200
Result Status
Sold
Prices Realised
$400

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