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200 Mon 'Doshū Zenisatsu'

Issuer Tosa Domain
Year 1868
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Value 200 Mon
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Obverse lettering 貮百文
(Translation: Two hundred Mon)
Reverse description Printed in black with applied red official stamps, the reverse carries a vertical inscription in Chinese seal script (tensho) positioned at the lower portion of the note, surrounded by interlacing twining plant tendrils that form the principal decorative border.
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The Tosa Domain's paper currency was issued under the authority of the han administration during the final convulsions of the Tokugawa system — a period when dozens of domains scrambled to establish local monetary instruments before the new Meiji government could suppress them. Tosa is historically notable as the home domain of Sakamoto Ryōma and a key power in the imperial restoration coalition, which gave its administrators a degree of confidence in issuing currency that smaller, more politically exposed domains lacked.

The "Zenisatsu" designation indicates a note denominated in mon, the old copper coinage unit already being phased out at the time of issue. By 1868 this note was functionally obsolete within months of printing.

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