Hansatsu

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by jcm, Oct 22, 2014.

  1. jcm

    jcm Active Member

    Are there any references on Hansatsu in English? I've seen a few in Japanese, but nothing in English.
     
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  3. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    This question was just asked on the IBNS forum. The answer there was that there are no references in English.
     
  4. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    I have one that is allegedly from the mid 18th century Hiroshima and I would like to verify that - and check it out on a Geiger counter.
     
  5. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

  6. jcm

    jcm Active Member

    I was looking for a catalog.
     
  7. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    The IBNS discussion indicated there is a Japanese catalog that has color illustrations of the notes although it is written entirely on Japanese. The illustrations were good enough for the non-Japanese reader to attribute notes. It costs about $200.00 however.
     
  8. jcm

    jcm Active Member

    Do you have a link to that discussion, I can't seem to find the IBNS forum.
     
  9. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    You have to be an IBNS member to access the IBNS forum.
     
  10. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    The following was posted on the IBNS discussion board about Hansatsu:

    When I sold my main Japan paper collection in 2001, I kept all of my hansatsu, thinking that someday I would publish my collection as representing what most Westerners would encounter in hansatsu. There is no way I could publish a comprehensive hansatsu catalog - I don’t have enough pieces (only about 1400), and I have an entire shelf of hansatsu catalogs in Japanese that I cannot read very easily. There were about 1750 ISSUERS of hansatsu at the time of the Meiji restoration - daimyos, hatamoto, merchants, pawnbrokers, village cooperatives, craftsmen’s guilds - you name it. When you think of all the separate series, individual denominations, and practically endless reissue stamps, it’s a hopeless task for a non-Japanese linguist.
     
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