DiemazzEarly Modern warfareShibaura WHNN Wang Zongyue Sambia Clash 17th century denominations in England adam eve 0415153794 Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei WWSP Mandonna Image:2005coal PNG coorg resorts chairlift ukhozi fm sabc imtoo psp video converter Ytterbium Fort Jefferson, Florida the hardy boyz vs mnm Practical Demonkeeping Bass (instrument) Kintetsu Tawaramoto Line Irig, Serbia Image:Fergana EN PNG french cuff 'B (digraph) Wikipedia:User page Huaiyi Category:Academic biography stubs WWQQ citizens arrest List of Xbox games Category:Articles lacking reliable references from August 2008 wduv dove tnc KBMT Waddesdon Manor railway station Christmas music 1996 Tour de France Zach Galligan alunite alum Tai Ping Shan Street lod score Boa Vista, Roraima World Press Freedom Day Wenxiang |
For other uses, see Yen (disambiguation).
The yen (圓) was the currency of Taiwan, between 1895 and 1946. It was on a par with and circulated alongside the Japanese yen. The yen was subdivided into 100 sen (錢).
HistoryIn 1895, as a result of the Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895), China ceded Taiwan to Japan in the Treaty of Shimonoseki. The Japanese yen became the currency of the island, with distinct banknotes denominated in yen issued by the Bank of Taiwan from 1889. Only banknotes and stamp currency were issued. In 1945, after Japan was defeated in World War II, the Republic of China assumed administration of Taiwan, took over Bank of Taiwan within a year and introduced the Taiwanese yuan which replaced the yen at par. BanknotesIn 1899, the Bank of Taiwan introduced 1 and 5 yen notes, followed by 50 yen notes in 1900 and 10 yen in 1901. 100 yen notes were introduced in 1937 and 1000 yen in 1945. The last notes issued were dated 1945. Stamp currencyIn 1917, stamp currency was issued in denominations of 5, 10, 20, and 50 sen. 1, 3 and 5 sen stamp currency was issued in 1918. These issues consisted of postage stamps of the appropriate denomination fixed to forms called tokubetsu yubin kitte daishi ("special postage stamp cards"). See alsoReferences
External links
|
Site Map: RSS 2.0
Recent Searches:
Taiwanese yen
Related Pages: |