10 yen coin


The 10 yen coin is one denomination of the Japanese yen.
The obverse of the coin depicts the Phoenix Hall of Byōdō-in, a Buddhist temple in Uji, Kyoto prefecture, with the kanji for "Japan" and "Ten Yen". The reverse shows the numerals "10" and the date of issue in kanji surrounded by bay laurel leaves.

History

Gold ten yen (1871-1910)

Ten yen coins were first issued in 1871 from a newly established mint at Osaka. The origin of mintage is not clear as there are conflicting reports stating that ten yen coins were either minted in San Francisco, or in Japan the prior year. In either case the unit of yen was officially adopted by the Meiji government in an act signed on June 27, 1871. Under the new law each ten yen coin was to weigh 257.2 grains, and contain 90% gold with a foreign exchange rate close to a United States Eagle. Gold bullion for coinage was delivered from private Japanese citizens, foreigners, and the Japanese government. No ten yen coins were minted between 1871 and 1876, during this time the Japanese government tried unsuccessfully to implement a gold standard with the amount of gold in circulation described as "very trifling". Gold bullion rose to a slight premium in 1874 which caused gold coin production as a whole to rapidly fall off. It was reported in the Quarterly Journal of Economics that by 1876 more gold coins were exported to foreign countries than for use domestically. Japan was later forced off of the gold standard in 1877 due to the cost of the Satsuma Rebellion. Twenty years would pass before the Japanese government went back on the gold standard. During this lapse non circulating ten yen gold coins were made in two non-consecutive years for two different reasons. The first occasion occurred in 1880 when ten yen gold proof coins were struck for exclusive use in presentation sets that were given away as gifts to foreign diplomats. The second and final instance involved the World's Columbian Exposition in 1892 where several newly minted coins were put on display.
When Japan went back on the gold standard in 1897, new ten yen coins were set by law to weigh 8.3g and have a diameter of 21.2mm. These new lighter and smaller coins were given a new design which features a sunburst superimposed on the sacred mirror on the obverse, and the value within a wreath on the reverse. The adoption of the gold standard allowed Japanese ten yen gold certificates to be redeemed for gold. This convertible paper currency was used in immense numbers while coined yen was seldom used or seen. Gold ten yen coins of the second design mostly remained in government vaults by the time mintage ceased for good in 1910. The coins that had been minted during those thirteen years continued to back up gold certificates until World War I due to inflation. The remaining gold coins in circulation were eventually withdrawn due to wartime conditions in the late 1930s. Those that remained in circulation were either hoarded or melted down by the public.

Modern ten yen (1950-)

The first ten yen coins made after World War II were authorized by law on March 2, 1950, by prime minister Shigeru Yoshida. These coins were to be made of German Silver, and act as "temporary subsidiary coins". A total of 432,970,000 ten yen coins minted in this new alloy were recorded as struck by the end of that year. By the end of 1951 almost 800 million of these coins had been minted and were waiting to be distributed. None of the German silver coins minted between 1950 and 1951 ever circulated as the coins were eventually melted. The decision to melt the coins came as the Korean War had driven nickel prices to about 4.1 million yen per ton. Those that escaped being melted and are now considered by collectors to be "scarce" Japanese pattern coins. Bronze ten yen coins were first minted in 1951, but were not released for general circulation until January 4, 1953. Ten yen coins minted between 1951 and 1958 have reeded edges and are nicknamed Giza 10, meaning “jagged 10 yen coin” in Japanese. The design which is used today features Phoenix Hall of Byōdō-in on the obverse, and Bay laurel leaves on the reverse. The design remains essentially the same other than the reeds being dropped in 1959 which gave the coins a smooth edge. Slight modifications were also made in the latter half of 1986 regarding the design of Byōdō-in. These coins are not culturally recommended to be offered at shrines, as another word for "10" is "toh", and another word for "yen" is "en". Combining these characters into "toh-en" can also read as "far destiny". Ten yen coins continue to be produced up to the present under the Reiwa era.

Circulation figures

Meiji

The following are circulation figures for the coins that were minted between the 4th, and the 43rd year of Meiji's reign. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 明治.
  • Inscriptions on Japanese coins from this period are read clockwise from right to left:
"Year" ← "Number representing year of reign" ← "Emperor's name"
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
04 4th1871
09 9th1876
10th187736
13th三十1880136
25th五十二1892Not circulated
30th十三1897
31st一十三1898
32nd二十三1899
33rd三十三1900
34th四十三1901
35th五十三1902
36th六十三1903
37th七十三1904
40th十四1907
41st一十四1908
42nd二十四1909
43rd三十四1910

Shōwa

The following are circulation dates which cover Emperor Hirohito's reign. The dates below correspond with the 26th to the 64th year of his reign. All ten yen coins that were made before 1959 have reeded edges, this has since changed to the present day smooth edge. Coins for this period will all begin with the Japanese symbol 昭和.
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
26th二十六1951101,068,000
27th二十七1952486,632,000
28th二十八1953466,300,000
29th二十九1954520,900,000
30th三十1955123,100,000
32nd三十二195750,000,000
33rd三十三1958 25,000,000
34th三十四1959 62,400,000
35th三十五1960225,900,000
36th三十六1961229,900,000
37th三十七1962284,200,000
38th三十八1963411,300,000
39th三十九1964479,200,000
40th四十1965387,600,000
41st四十一1966395,900,000
42nd四十二1967158,900,000
43rd四十三1968363,600,000
44th四十四1969414,800,000
45th四十五1970382,700,000
46th四十六1971610,050,000
47th四十七1972634,950,000
48th四十八19731345 1,345,000,000
49th四十九19741780 1,780,000,000
50th五十19751280 1,280,260,000
51st五十一19761369 1,369,740,000
52nd五十二19771467 1,467,000,000
53rd五十三19781435 1,435,000,000
54th五十四19791207 1,207,000,000
55th五十五19801127 1,127,000,000
56th五十六19811369 1,369,000,000
57th五十七1982890,000,000
58th五十八1983870,000,000
59th五十九1984533,850,000
60th六十1985335,150,000
61st六十一198668,960,000
62nd六十二1987165,775,000
63rd六十三1988618,112,000
64th六十四198974,692,000

Heisei

The following are circulation dates during the reign of Emperor Akihito. who was crowned in 1989. The dates below correspond with the 1st to the 31st year of his reign. First year of reign coins are marked with a 元 symbol as a one-year type. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 平成.
  • Japanese coins are read with a left to right format:
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
01 1st1989666,308,000
02 2nd1990754,953,000
03 3rd1991632,120,000
04 4th1992538,130,000
05 5th1993249,240,000
06 6th1994190,767,000
07 7th1995248,874,000
08 8th1996546,213,000
09 9th1997491,086,000
10th1998410,612,000
11th十一1999359,120,000
12th十二2000315,026,000
13th十三2001542,024,000
14th十四2002455,667,000
15th十五2003551,406,000
16th十六2004592,903,000
17th十七2005504,029,000
18th十八2006440,594,000
19th十九2007388,904,000
20th二十2008362,811,000
21st二十一2009338,003,000
22nd二十二2010328,905,000
23rd二十三2011255,936,000
24th二十四2012279,211,000
25th二十五2013100,892,000
26th二十六2014171,013,000
27th二十七2015203,004,000
28th二十八2016198,064,000
29th二十九2017124,927,000
30th三十2018178,960,000
31st三十一2019197,594,000

Reiwa

The following are circulation dates in the reign of the current Emperor. Naruhito's accession to the Chrysanthemum Throne took place on May 1, 2019, and he was formally enthroned on October 22, 2019. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 令和. The inaugural year coin was marked 元 and debuted during the summer of that year.
  • Japanese coins are read with a left to right format:
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
1st2019137,026,000
2nd2020276,428,000
3rd2021139,133,000
4th2022129,874,000
5th202327,927,000
6th2024109,027,000
7th2025TBD

Collecting

The value of any given coin is determined by survivability rate and condition as collectors in general prefer uncleaned appealing coins. The first ten yen coins were made from 1871 to 1892 with coins dated 1871, 1876, 1877, 1880, and 1892 using a dragon design. All of these dates outside of those from 1871 are now rarely found for sale as they are highly valued. Coins with the latter of these two dates were never intended for circulation as coins dated 1880 were part of presentation sets. It's now estimated that only four to five known "year 13" coins have survived with an example selling at auction for $276,000 in 2011. No surviving examples are known for coins dated 1892 which had been exhibited at the World's Columbian Exposition.
The second smaller design used for this denomination was minted from 1897 to 1910 after Japan officially adopted the gold standard. These are generally valued in lesser amounts than their predecessors, though rarer key dates in this group include coins dated 1904, 1907, and 1910. As a whole, the series dated from 1870 to 1910 can also be found on the market inside "Ministry of Finance" labeled plastic holders. These came from a hoard of 30,000 gold coins that were found to have been held by the Ministry of Finance. The Japanese government held a series of auctions from 2005 through 2007 which included previously unreported rare coins in denominations of 5, 10 and 20 Yen.
Modern ten yen coins date back to 1951 when the coins were struck for circulation using a bronze alloy. There is a misconception among the Japanese public that Giza 10 are worth a lot of money because of their reeds. On average these coins are worth only 3 to 4 times their face value, or in some cases just their face value. Ten yen coins from this period are only valued highly in uncirculated grades. Modifications to the ten yen coin were made in 1986 which show slight differences in the appearance of Byodoin Phoenix Hall. Those made in the latter half of 1986 with these temple changes were reported to be worth over $1,000 by TV Tokyo in 2019.