Wadōkaichin — Le wadōkaichin (和同開珎, wadōkaichin?), pouvant aussi s’écrire en alphabet latin wadō kaichin ou wadō kaihō, est la plus ancienne monnaie officielle japonaise : ayant été fabriquée à partir de 708 ap J. C. sur l ordre de l impératrice Gemmei.… … Wikipédia en Français
Japanese mon (currency) — Kan ei Tsūhō (寛永通宝) coins. The top ones were each worth 4 mon, the middle and bottom ones were worth 1 mon each … Wikipedia
Chichibu (Saitama) — 秩父市 Chichibu … Wikipedia Español
Wadō (era) — La era Wadō (和銅, Wadō?) fue una era japonesa (年号, nengō … Wikipedia Español
Japanese yen — ] while the same amount of gold is worth about 4715 yen. [cite web | author=xe.com | date=2006 09 07 | url=http://www.xe.com/ucc/convert.cgi?Amount=0.04822612 From=XAU To=JPY | title=Equivalent of 0.04822612 troy ounce of gold in yen | accessdate … Wikipedia
Tang Dynasty — For the band, see Tang Dynasty (band). Tang 唐 ← … Wikipedia
Bank of Japan — 日本銀行 (Japanese) … Wikipedia
Musashi Province — Map of Japanese provinces with province highlighted Musashi Province (武蔵国, Musashi no kuni? … Wikipedia
Ryō (Japanese coin) — For other meanings with or without the long ō , see ryo . A ryō (Japanese: 両) was a gold piece in pre Meiji Japan. It was worth about sixty monme of silver or four kan (4,000 coins) of copper (the exchange rate fluctuated). It was eventually… … Wikipedia
Koban (coin) — The koban (小判, alternately ōban) was a Japanese oval gold coin in Edo period feudal Japan, equal to one ryō , another early Japanese monetary unit (a ryō can be imagined as worth a thousand dollars, although the value of the coin, like the value… … Wikipedia