What is this Chinese brick?

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by kardinalisimo, May 11, 2017.

  1. Asian Fever

    Asian Fever Well-Known Member

    The weight is 50*50gram=2500gram
     
    tie.dye.cat likes this.
  2. Asian Fever

    Asian Fever Well-Known Member

    The words are mixed with traditional and simplified. I highly doubt this silver bar is made of real silver.

    One side of this bar points out it is a silver bar for Taiwan official use, another side marks it is a "Fengtian silver bar" which means it was produced in Northeast China.

    Check this link on youtube(From 3:22 to the end), which could be a little helpful.
     
    Last edited: May 12, 2017
    tie.dye.cat likes this.
  3. paleblue

    paleblue New Member

    You are talking about the modern tael while i was talking about the ancient tale. They are different. however i was wrong saying 34. it should be 37.5g
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tael
    if this bar was real it should be scaled by ancient tael.
     
  4. kardinalisimo

    kardinalisimo Well-Known Member

    Brought the piece to two pawn shops and their acid tests came negative. So, I guess not silver. Unless silver core with coated alloy on the top but why someone would do that. Or silver content that the test cannot detect? But I doubt that, as if authentic, the bar should be pure or close to pure silver.
    I read that there are some old sycee bars that do not follow the general rule of the weight of 1 teal but they are usually heavier than what supposed to be, not lighter.
    As to the characters, they turned to be all Traditional besides the first one that should be strictly 臺 but here is somewhat abbreviated. I guess such should not be present on official government piece.
    I emailed the person who wrote great material about Chinese sycees but no reply yet.

    http://www.sycee-on-line.com/Sycee_talks.htm

    And by the way, the 50 teal bar from pinterest appears to be very close in appearance to mine, so maybe it is not authentic either. Wish there was more info about it.
     
  5. khl889

    khl889 Well-Known Member

    No, 灣 wan is in simplified form.

    My guess is that this is a paperweight, commonly used in calligraphy, in the shape of a silver ingot.

    Chinese paperweights usually come in pairs, and you can pick up a matching one over on Yahoo Auctions Taiwan for not very much money.
     
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  6. kardinalisimo

    kardinalisimo Well-Known Member

    I am not sure if it is a simplified form, at least not a modern one. Again, somewhat abbreviated. The original character looks too complex to be molded so maybe they 'simplified' it.
     
  7. Hollyblue

    Hollyblue Well-Known Member

    Nothing is too complex to be molded and cast.
     
  8. khl889

    khl889 Well-Known Member

  9. all_fakes

    all_fakes Well-Known Member

    I'd vote for the idea that it is a paperweight in the shape of an ingot. Makes perfect sense.
     
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