Korean won

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The won (원, 圓) was the currency of Korea between 1902 and 1910. It was subdivided into 100 chon (전, 錢).

Korean won
Hangul 원, 전
Hanja 圓, 錢
Revised Romanization won, jeon
McCune–Reischauer wŏn, chŏn

Etymology

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Won is a cognate of the Chinese yuan and Japanese yen.

History

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The won was introduced in 1902, replacing the yang at a rate of 1 won = 5 yang. In 1909, the Bank of Korea (한국은행; 韓國銀行) was founded in Seoul as a central bank and began issuing currency of a modern type. The won was equivalent to the Japanese yen and was replaced by the Korean yen in 1910 during the Colonial Era. In 1910, the Bank of Korea was renamed the Bank of Joseon (조선은행; 朝鮮銀行), which issued notes denominated in yen and sen.

Coins

File:Korea 1907 20 Won.jpg
Korea 1907 20 gold Won

Coins were minted in the denominations of ½, 1, 5, 10 and 20 chon, ½, 5, 10 and 20 won. The coins all carried the title of the "state", Daehan (대한; 大韓), and the Korean era name, Gwangmu (광무; 光武) and then Yunghui (융희;隆熙), whilst the specifications were equivalent to the coins of the Japanese yen.

Korean Won Coins
Obverse Reverse Denomination Composition
1909 Ban jeon of the Korean Empire 01.jpg 50px ½ chon Bronze
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 50px 1 chon
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 5 chon Cupronickel
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 10 chon 800‰ silver
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 50px 20 chon
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png ½ won
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 5 won 900‰ gold
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 10 won
The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png The Imperial Seal of Korea 03.png 20 won

Banknotes

No banknotes were issued denominated in won. However, Korean yen notes were issued by Dai Ichi Ginko (First National Bank (of Japan), 주식회사제일은행, 株式會社第一銀行).

See also

References

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Preceded by:
Korean yang
Reason: heavier influence by Japan
Ratio: 1 won = 5 yang
Currency of Korea
1902 – 1910
Concurrent with: Korean yen
Succeeded by:
Korean yen
Reason: complete annexation by Japan
Ratio: at par