Qian (mass)


Qian, called tsin in Cantonese, tiền or đồng in Vietnamese, or "Chinese ounce" or "mace" in English, is a traditional Chinese unit for weight measurement. It originated in China before being introduced to neighboring countries in East Asia.
Nowaday, the mass of 1 qian equals 5 grams in mainland China, 3.75 grams in Taiwan,
3.7799 grams in Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia,
and 3.78 grams in Vietnam.
Qian is mostly used in the traditional markets, and famous for measuring gold, silver and Chinese medicines.
In Japan, the equivalent mass unit to the qian is the momme.

China Mainland

On June 25, 1959, the State Council of the People's Republic of China issued the "Order on the Unified Measurement System", retaining the market measure system, with minor amendment.
PinyinCharacterRelative valueMetric valueImperial valueNotes
市厘50 mgcash
fēn市分500 mgcandareen
qián市錢5 g0.1764 ozmace or Chinese dram
liǎng市兩50 g1.764 oztael or Chinese ounce
jīn市斤1500 g1.102 lbcatty or Chinese pound
formerly 16 liang = 1 jin
dàn市擔10050 kg110.2 lbpicul or Chinese hundredweight

where 1 qian equals 5 grams, and 10 qiags equals 1 liang. The traditional Chinese medicine measurement system remains unchanged.

Taiwan

In 1895, Taiwan was ceded to Japan from China. The Japanese implemented the metric system, but the Taiwanese still followed their own habits and continued to use the old weights and measures of the Qing Dynasty. 1 Taiwan qian is equal to 3.75 grams, or 1/10 Taiwan liang.

Hong Kong and Macau

Hong Kong and Macau mass units

Currently, Hong Kong law stipulates that one qian is equal to 1/10 liang, which is 3.779936375 grams.
JyutpingCharacterEnglishPortugueseRelative valueRelation to the Traditional Chinese Units Metric valueImperial valueNotes
lei4li (cash)liz condorim
fan1fen (candareen, fan)condorim maz0.2133 dr
cin4qian maz' tael'2.1333 dr
loeng2liang (leung, tael)tael cate1.3333 oz604.78982/16=37.79936375
gan1jin (gan, catty)cate1 pico604.78982 g1.3333 lbHong Kong and Macau share the definition.
daam3dan (tam, dan)pico100-60.478982 kg133.3333 lbHong Kong and Macau share the definition.

Similarly, Singapore law stipulates that one qian equals 3.7799 g. Malaysia has the same regulations as it is a former British colony as well.

Hong Kong troy units

These are used for trading precious metals such as gold and silver.
EnglishCharacterRelative valueMetric valueImperial valueNotes
fen (candareen) troy金衡分374.29 mg0.096 drt
qian troy金衡錢3.7429 g0.96 drt
liang (tael) troy金衡兩137.429 g1.2 ozt

Vietnam

In Vietnam, the unit of qian is called "đồng or tiền": 1 đồng is equal to 3.78 grams or 10 phân by traditional value.
Name in Chữ Quốc ngữHán/Nôm nameTraditional valueTraditional conversionModern valueModern conversion
tấn604.5 kg10 tạ kg10 tạ
quân302.25 kg5 tạ500 kgobsolete
tạ60.45 kg10 yến100 kg10 yến
bình30.225 kg5 yến50 kgobsolete
yến6.045 kg10 cân10 kg10 cân
cân604.5 g16 lạng1 kg10 lạng
nén378 g10 lạng
lạng37.8 g10 đồng100 g
đồng or tiền3.78 g10 phân
phân0.38 g10 ly
ly or li37.8 mg10 hào
hào3.8 mg10 ti
ti0.4 mg10 hốt
hốt0.04 mg10 vi
vi0.004 mg

For more information on the Chinese mass measurement system, please see article Jin (mass).