Invention

Paper Money

Chinese merchants invented paper money during the Tang Dynasty to avoid carrying heavy coins.

China · 7th century
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Paper money originated in China during the Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE), when merchants in Sichuan province began using certificates of deposit called feiqian, or "flying money," to avoid transporting heavy strings of copper coins over long distances.1 These certificates were not yet currency in the modern sense. They were receipts that could be exchanged for coins at a government office in the capital.

The transition from receipt to currency occurred during the Song Dynasty (960-1279 CE). In the 1020s, the government of Sichuan authorized the printing of jiaozi, the first government-issued paper notes intended to circulate as money.2 By the twelfth century, the Song government was printing paper money backed by reserves of coin, silk, and gold.

1020s
The decade the Song Dynasty authorized the first government-issued paper currency

The Mongol Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) under Kublai Khan expanded paper money into a dominant medium of exchange across the empire. Marco Polo described the system with astonishment in his account of his travels, noting that the Great Khan's paper notes were accepted throughout his realm.3

Europe did not adopt paper currency until centuries later. The Stockholm Banco in Sweden issued the first European banknotes in 1661.4 The Bank of England followed in 1694. The abstraction that a piece of paper could represent value, carry wages, and settle debts, an assumption embedded in every modern salary payment, was a Chinese invention that took roughly a thousand years to reach the rest of the world.5

7th century
Tang Dynasty merchants in Sichuan began using paper certificates called feiqian to avoid carrying coins.
1020s
The Song Dynasty authorized the printing of jiaozi, the first government-issued paper notes.
1661
Stockholm Banco issued the first European banknotes in Sweden.
1694
The Bank of England began issuing paper notes.
1 Richard von Glahn, Fountain of Fortune: Money and Monetary Policy in China, 1000-1700 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), 28-40.
2 von Glahn, Fountain of Fortune, 42-58.
3 Marco Polo, The Travels of Marco Polo, trans. Ronald Latham (London: Penguin, 1958), Book 2, Chapter 24.
4 Per Hortlund, "The Provision of Credit and Deposit Services to the Public by Swedish Savings Banks," Scandinavian Economic History Review 53, no. 1 (2005): 7-24.
5 William N. Goetzmann, Money Changes Everything: How Finance Made Civilization Possible (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016), 180-205.
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