Moneta Gallery Coin Museum



Users 22,483
Photos 3,383
Comments 351
Views 16,336,299
Disk Space 346.6mb

SunMon TueWed ThuFri Sat
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Moneta 2454
Zantetsuken 293
Chinacash 170
stretrader99z 133
numismatist6 100

Italy_1903_25c.jpg
Italy 1903 25 centes
numismatist6

[ Member Galleries ]
17al_a.jpg
Ozark National Sceni
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
yztb1o-horz.jpg
YONG ZHENG TONG BAO
Chinacash

[ Member Galleries ]
8c028zALEXBLACKBK.jpg
Kings of Thrace,Lysi
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
Scan-090925-0010.jpg
1999 TRADE DOLLAR (3
Chinacash

[ Member Galleries ]
D2BE2A5F-9BCC-4F2B-883C-B2E65D99EAFE.png
Constantine X - Doub
Ela126

[ Member Galleries ]
· more ·

 

« Previous image · Next image »

Clay_Cowrie1
China - Clay cowrie

« Previous image  · Slide Show · Next image »

Moneta



Registered: August 2005
Location: Arizona USA
Posts: 2,365
users gallery
There are several types of baked clay imitation cowries. This one is distinctive because the top edge has a pattern on both sides that appears like a sine wave with dots filling the spaces. It's 31 x 21 x 7 mm at 3.98 g.


I was the lucky winner in Kagin's Auction (Mar 2021) Lot# 4233. It consisted of 19 examples that were previously in the Nate S Shapiro Collection and displayed at the Detroit Money Museum. These were acquired before 1960 but were sold when the Museum closed (~1992). In ancient China cowrie seashells (Cyprea Moneta & C. Annulus) were so valuable that imitations were made to serve as money and grave items.
This very rare example is unusually large and beautiful. It appears to be fashioned out of green jadeite, which is to say JADE!. It's 75 mm long, 41.5 mm wide, and 20 mm thick, it weights 72.5 grams. It features the carved 'teeth' of a natural cowrie but this example also shows a carving on the back which is a large circle with a 'X' through it that has serifs at the two ends that are visible.
All of the number tags, unfortunately glued to most of the specimens in the museum collection, are a characteristic of all Charles Opitz collection pieces.


Moneta Library has articles on Cowries to VIEW and DOWNLOAD:
The Worlds's First Money, Chinese Cowries and Their Imitations - by Ted Puls: [ link ]
Cowries - Bob Reis: [ link ]
Origin of Cowries in Ancient China - UofPa: [ link ]
Metallic Cowries - Royal Asiatic Society: [ link ]
Nice Video on Cowrie history: [ link ]
An excellent article in ANA's "Numismatist" magazine, Oct 2017 > [ link ]
SEE how far back in time decorative sea shells were important to prehistoric man at his : [ link ]
Interested in Primitive Money? Then check out this YouTube video created by Kagins Auctions featuring Bob Leonard and Charles Opitz upon the massive sale in March 2021. Click this: [ link ]
· Date: May 29, 2021 · Views: 684 · Filesize: 149.6kb · Dimensions: 668 x 500 ·
Keywords: Clay cowrie

« more
US_Eagle-2021-typ2.jpg
US_Eagle-2021-typ2.jpg
MON_Che-Guevara_1kT_2018.jpg
MON_Che-Guevara_1kT_2018.jpg
MON_500T_1918-Pterosauria.jpg
UK_St_Helena.jpg
White_Jade_Cowrie.jpg
White_Stone_Cowrie.jpg
Oval_Lead_Cowrie-Sm.jpg
Oval_Lead_Cowrie-Lg.jpg
Clay_Cowrie1.jpg
Bronze_Grate_Cowrie.jpg
Lead-Cowries-Sm_Med.jpg
C_Moneta_lead_2.jpg
Bronze_Ring-Cowrie.jpg
Bone_x3.jpg
Mother-of-Pearl.jpg
Bronze-cowrie.jpg
Wood.jpg
Jadeite2_ob.jpg
Jadeite2_ob.jpg
· more »


Photo Sharing Gallery by PhotoPost
Copyright © 2007 All Enthusiast, Inc.

No portion of this page, text, images or code, may be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.