- Mace (measurement)
A mace (zh-cpcy|c=|p=qián|cy=chìhn;
Hong Kong English usage also: tsincite web|title = Weights and Measures Ordinance |work = The Law of Hong Kong | url = http://www.legislation.gov.hk/blis_ind.nsf/e1bf50c09a33d3dc482564840019d2f4/4ed2ff0cf02f2fd9c82564760077af3c?OpenDocument ] ) is a traditional Chinese measurement of weight inEast Asia that was also used as a currency denomination. It is equal to 10candareen s and is 1/10 of atael or approximately 3.78gram s. A troy candareen is approximately 3.74 grams. InHong Kong , one mace is 3.779936375gramme . and in Ordinance 22 of 1884, it is frac|2|15 oz. avoir.In imperial
China , 10candareen s equaled 1 mace which was 1/10 of atael and, like the other units, was used in weight-denominated silver currency system. A common denomination was 7 mace and 2 candareens, equal to one silverChinese yuan .Name
Like other similar measures such as tael and
catty , the English word "mace" derives from Malay, in this case through Dutch "maes", plural "masen", from Malay "mas" which, in turn , derived fromSanskrit "IAST|māṣa", a word related to "mash," another name for the urad bean, and masha, a traditional Indian unit of weight equal to 0.97 gram. [OED|Mace "n³"] This word is unrelated to other uses of mace in English.The Chinese word for mace is "qián" (錢), which is also a generic word for "money" in Mandarin Chinese. (The same
Chinese character (kanji ) was used for theJapan ese "sen", the former unit equal to frac|100 of aJapanese yen and for theVietnamese tiền , a currency used in late imperial Vietnam, although neither of these is ever known as "mace" in English.)References
ee also
*
Chinese units of measurement
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.