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Champion Galleries Hong Kong Auctions, Room 907 Silvercord Tower 2, 30 Canton Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China. Telephone: (852) 2150-5744; Fax: (852) 3007-4311. For more information or to discuss consigning items to future auctions, contact Champion President, Michael Chou, at mhlchou@yahoo.com or at championghka@gmail.com.

CHAMPION GALLERIES JUNE HONG KONG AUCTION FULL OF CHINESE RARITIES

Chinese RaritiesThe June 22, 2008 Champion Galleries sale in Hong Kong will contain many rare and interesting Chinese coins and bank notes, according to Champion Galleries President, Michael Chou. The sale will be held at the Holiday Inn Golden Mile in Kowloon, the site of major numismatic auctions and the Hong Kong Coin Show for more than 25 years. Bilingual catalogs, in both Chinese and English, may be reserved by contacting the company at the addresses at the end of this review.

Leading the list of rarities in this sale is the 1867 Shanghai Tael pattern stuck at the Hong Kong Mint (Kann 911a), from the Wayte Raymond Collection, certified Proof-64 by PCGS and NGC, and estimated to bring US $100,000 or more (all prices in this review are in U.S. dollars). Though inscribed with both Shanghai and Hong Kong, this coin was not intended for circulation in either place, but was to be a national coinage for use throughout China. Hong Kong in this case was simply a mintmark, and Shanghai indicated that it was struck to the standard of the Shanghai tael.

Another major rarity, certified by NGC as Specimen-64, is the 1903 Hupoo Tael (Kann 927). The dies for this coin, which features a unique type of dragon, were engraved in Japan, most likely at the Osaka Mint, but the coin itself was struck in Tientsin. This beautiful coin is expected to sell for $70.000. Estimated at the same level, is a 1907 Peiyang Tael (Kann 938a), which previously appeared in the 1991 sale of the Goodman Collection. Struck at the Tientsin Mint using the same Japanese style dragon as on the Hupoo coin, this piece is rated MS-62 by NGC.

From Kiangnan (the Nanking Mint) there is an undated Dragon Dollar struck in 1897, similar to Kann 66, but with a plain edge and struck in copper. Kann does not list this coin with a plain edge, though such exists in silver, and he does not list any copper strikings of the 1897 dollars. The plain edge 1897 dollars are listed in both silver and copper in H. Chang’s 1981 catalog, “Silver Dollars and Taels of China.” This copper pattern dollar is expected to bring $50,000. (more…)

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