Out of Place Chinese Coins Prompt Wonder: Did Medieval Asia and Britain Interact?
UPDATED 2 JANUARY, 2021 - 01:13 ALICIA MCDERMOTT, Ancient Origins Net
The worn cast copper alloy Chinese coin, from the Northern Song dynasty, minted during the Xining reign between 1068 and 1077 AD, and found in Cheshire, England. Source: PAS |
Britain’s antiquities experts have mostly written them off as a loss from a curated collection, but the presence of two Chinese Northern Song dynasty (960 - 1127 AD) coins unearthed at separate sites in England have people wondering about the links between Medieval Asia and Britain. A Cambridge University archaeologist says these coins support the idea that Britain and east Asian groups were interacting in 13th and 14th century.
Are the Ancient Chinese Coins Genuine Losses?
The first coin was found in 2018 in Cheshire and is the first known example of a Chinese coin from the Northern Song dynasty period discovered in England, according to News.com.au. The Independent reports that the previous discovery is now joined by another 25mm copper-alloy coin that was recently discovered in a field in Buriton, near Petersfield, in Hampshire.
The Chinese coin discovered in Hampshire. ( Hampshire Cultural Trust ) |
Coins of China (Song through Qing dynasties), Japan and Korea. ( CC BY SA 3.0 ) |
Dr. Green also points out that the Northern Song dynasty minted so many coins that they continued to be in circulation well into the late fourteenth century. Taking these factors into consideration, the archaeologist writes that
“the fact that we now have two, rather than one, eleventh-century Northern Song dynasty coins from England, both recovered from what seem to be medieval to early modern sites, adds weight to the case for considering them genuinely ancient losses.”
Doubts Cast on the Chinese Coins
In 2018, the Portable Antiquities Scheme described the worn coin from Cheshire as a cast copper alloy piece minted during the Xining reign (1068 -1077 AD.) They declared “It is doubtful that this is a genuine medieval find (i.e. present in the country due to trade and lost accidentally) but more likely a more recent loss from an [sic] curated collection.” But Dr. Green worries the ‘loss from a curated collection’ explanation for unusual discoveries is overused, writing,
The Chinese coin found in Cheshire. (Portable Antiquities Scheme/ CC BY SA 4.0 ) |
Thus, Dr. Green decided to find out “whether it is at all possible that such a coin might have arrived in Britain during the medieval era , and […] review the evidence for contacts between East Asia and Britain in that period whatever our conclusion.”
Evidence of Cross-Cultural Interaction
Much of the evidence she has found for these Chinese coins being genuine finds comes from texts, but there is enough that it is worth considering Medieval Asian-British interaction. Dr. Green provides a series of literary examples. One of a few detailed on her blog is an account of a Flemish Franciscan missionary and explorer named William of Rubruck (who died circa 1293) encountering an Englishman named Basil while Rubruck visited Mongolia in 1254 AD. Basil told Rubruck he was living at Karakorum, (near Kharkhorin, Mongolia) the Mongol Empire capital, from 1235-1260.
Detail of Andrea di Bonaiuto's fresco 'The Way of Salvation/The Church Militant and the Church Triumphant', c. 1365–1368. The figures at the center are identified by Jacques Paviot as an English knight of the Garter talking to a Mongol. ( Public Domain ) |
Apart from accounts of British people going to Asia, Dr. Green also provides evidence of Mongol diplomatic contacts with England in the 13th century. One written example comes from Guy Foulques, future Pope Clement IV, complaining of “unidentified Mongol envoys ('Tartars') actually crossing the Channel to visit England in 1264” while Foulques was still waiting for his own permission to cross.
The tombstone of Katerina Ilioni, daughter of the Genoese merchant Domenico Ilioni, dated to 1342 and found at Yangzhou, China. ( Public Domain ) |
Furthermore, it has been found that Edward II sent a letter to the Emperor of China on May 22, 1313 asking for his help and protection for the bishop William of Villeneuve. Of course, other Europeans were also in China from the late 13th century onwards, such as Marco Polo and Peter of Lucalongo as well as Genoese and Venetian merchants.
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SPECIAL THANKS TO AONGHAIS (JULI) FOR THE LINK TO THE ARTICLE
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