. . "Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o"@en . "1"^^ . . "200000000"^^ . . . "second series = 2.10"@en . "20"^^ . . . . . . "Blank"@en . . . . . "Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o"@en . . . "22"^^ . . . . . . . "27629000"^^ . . . . . . "1"^^ . "The Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o (H\u00E1n t\u1EF1: \u5553\u5B9A\u901A\u5BF3) was a French Indochinese sap\u00E8que coin produced from 1921 until 1933, the design of the coin was round with a square hole that was used for stringing them together. Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh became King of Annam in 1916 the funding for the production of new cash coins was reduced by the Hanoi Mint which lead to the demand of the Vietnamese market for low value denominations to not be met, furthermore, after Hanoi reduced funding for the Thanh H\u00F3a Mint, which until that time was producing enough low denomination cast cash coins to meet the market's demands, which caused most, but not all, of the production of cash coins at the mint to cease in 1920. In response a new committee was formed in Hanoi which ordered the creation of machine-struck Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o cash coins, these are the first machine-struck four character Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o (\u901A\u5BF3) coins in Vietnam with the reigning emperor's name as the French government had prior tried to introduce a Cochinchinese 2 sap\u00E8que coin that continued under French Indochina that weighed 2.05 grams and had a nominal value of 1\u2044500 piastre, later the colonial government of the French Protectorate of Tonkin had unsuccessfully tried to introduce a zinc milled sap\u00E8que produced by the Paris Mint with a nominal value of 1\u2044600 piastre from 1905 until 1906. Unlike the earlier attempts at producing machine-struck cash coins by the colonial French authorities the Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o proved to be much more successful as the first series had a production of 27,629,000 coins while the second series greatly exceeded this with around 200,000,000 coins produced in Hu\u1EBF, Haiphong, and Hanoi. The Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o continued to be produced long after the death of Emperor Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh under his successor B\u1EA3o \u0110\u1EA1i until it was phased out by the B\u1EA3o \u0110\u1EA1i Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o (\u4FDD\u5927\u901A\u5BF3) in 1933. In the French protectorate of Annam cash coins were still being used for virtually all transactions as late as 1921, in order to combat deflation the Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o was introduced and mass-produced. The new machine-struck were produced in the French protectorate of Tonkin to be placed into the treasury of the government of the Nguy\u1EC5n dynasty until an opportune moment would present itself to introduce them into general circulation to combat the negative effects of hoarding, which resulted in the gradual disappearance of older cash coins from circulation causing the low denomination copper-alloy coins to become scarce. The new Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o cash coins were introduced with a hope to reduce the cost of living caused by delfation. The French government in Annam announced in their official bulletin that they would exchange 1 Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o cash coin for 6 old cash coins in order to promote their circulation. Because the machine-struck Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o cash coins were heavier than the earlier milled 2 sap\u00E8ques produced by the Paris Mint, they were likely valued at 1\u2044200 piastre. A number of the machine-struck cash coins were produced by Poinsard & Veyret Comptoirs D\u2019Extr\u00EAme-Orient in H\u1EA3i Ph\u00F2ng, French Tonkin. While the Hanoi-made coins were struck by the Banque de l'Indochine. In Tonkin these coins were welcomed and circulated with small denomination coins of the French Indochinese piastre, while in Annam the people were more reluctant to adopt the new machine-struck coinage."@en . . . . ""@en . . . "first series = 2.28 g"@en . . . . "The Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o (H\u00E1n t\u1EF1: \u5553\u5B9A\u901A\u5BF3) was a French Indochinese sap\u00E8que coin produced from 1921 until 1933, the design of the coin was round with a square hole that was used for stringing them together. Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh became King of Annam in 1916 the funding for the production of new cash coins was reduced by the Hanoi Mint which lead to the demand of the Vietnamese market for low value denominations to not be met, furthermore, after Hanoi reduced funding for the Thanh H\u00F3a Mint, which until that time was producing enough low denomination cast cash coins to meet the market's demands, which caused most, but not all, of the production of cash coins at the mint to cease in 1920. In response a new committee was formed in Hanoi which ordered the creation of machine-struck Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o cash coi"@en . . "File:Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o - Art-Hanoi 03.jpg"@en . . . . . "File:Kh\u1EA3i \u0110\u1ECBnh Th\u00F4ng B\u1EA3o - Art-Hanoi 04.jpg"@en . "56752487"^^ . . . . . . . . . "9531"^^ . . . ""@en . . "\u2013"@en . . . . . . "\u5553\u5B9A\u901A\u5BF3"@en . . . "1079883520"^^ . . . . . . . . . .