Qiang tie

1898 ruble banknote

Qiang tie (Chinese: 羌帖; pinyin: qiāng tiē) is a Chinese folk name for banknotes of the Russian ruble issued by the Russian Empire and later by the White Army. The main regions of ruble transactions in China were concentrated along the Chinese Eastern Railway and Harbin in Manchuria and Ili and Tacheng in Xinjiang.[1] Russian currency in China began circulating in the 1860s and were withdrawn due to severe depreciation in the mid-1920s. There were many qiang tie sources, including the State Bank of the Russian Empire, the Russian Provisional Government, Omsk bonds issued by the Provisional All-Russian Government, the Russo-Chinese Bank, and the administration of the Eastern Railway.[2]

  1. ^ Hsu, Chia Yin (2014). "The 'Color' of Money: The Ruble, Competing Currencies, and Conceptions of Citizenship in Manchuria and the Russian Far East, 1890s-1920s". The Russian Review. 73 (1): 83–110. doi:10.1111/russ.10721. JSTOR 43661979.
  2. ^ Wang, Xuewen; Zhang, Xinzhi (2003). ""羌帖":危害白山黑水五十载 [Qiangtie]". 俄罗斯研究 [Russian Studies]. 3: 78–83.

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