Free: 16 DIFFERENT HELLNOTES WITH GIN! - Antiques - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: 16 DIFFERENT HELLNOTES WITH GIN!

16 DIFFERENT HELLNOTES WITH GIN!
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Description

The listing, 16 DIFFERENT HELLNOTES WITH GIN! has ended.

This is for 16 different Chinese Hellnotes!!!!
You can see the 6 inch ruler in the middle to judge the size! The 6 notes in the middle are the size of a one dollar bill...the others are larger!! Some notes may vary..depending on what I can buy at the local market! These are not spendable currency!!!!
They have been using these to burn to offer passed relatives in the after life here in China for hundreds of years!! I burn some to my passed grandparents twice a year just in case it's really true!! You can see my over 6400 feed backs on what people say about my bonus items... Offering a 3333 GIN, so you don't miss owning some of these beautiful Hellnotes! If GIN is used..get 4 more Chinese Hellnotes as a bonus item!
Also, since this is coming from China!..It take 4 to 5 weeks for shipping!! I'm sure you've heard the saying, "On a slow boat from China"!! Well, it's true, if you can't wait that long...please,,, DON'T Bid on this auction!!GOOD LUCK!!! CHINA MIKE
Questions & Comments
Original
The word hell on hell bank notes refers to Diyu (simplified Chinese: 地狱; traditional Chinese: 地獄; pinyin: dìyù, "underworld prison"; also 地府, dìfǔ, "underworld court"). These words are printed on some notes. In traditional Chinese belief, it is thought to be where the souls of the dead are first judged by the Lord of the Earthly Court, Yan Wang. After this particular judgement, they are either escorted to heaven or sent into the maze of underworld levels and chambers to atone for their sins. People believe that even in the earthly court, spirits need to use money.[2]

A story says that the word hell was introduced to China by Christian missionaries, who preached that all non-Christian Chinese people would "go to hell" after death. The word "Hell" was thus misinterpreted to be the proper English term for the afterlife and hence adopted as such. Some printed notes attempt to correct this by omitting the word "hell" and sometimes replacing it with "heaven" or "paradise". These particular bills are usually found in joss packs meant to be burned for Chinese deities, and usually have the same design as hell bank notes but with different colours.
May 20th, 2014 at 9:58:34 PM PDT by
Original
Hell money is a form of joss paper printed to resemble legal tender bank notes. This faux money has been in use since at least the late 19th century and possibly much earlier. Early 20th century examples took the resemblance of minor commercial currency of the type issued by businesses across China until the mid-1940s.[1] The notes are not an officially recognized currency or legal tender since their sole intended purpose is to be offered as burnt-offerings to the deceased as often practiced by the Chinese and several East Asian cultures.

The identification of this type of joss paper as "hell bank notes" or "hell money" and singling them out is largely a Western construct, since these items are simply regarded as yet another form of joss paper (冥幣, 陰司紙, 紙錢, or 金紙) in East Asian cultures and have no special name or status.
May 20th, 2014 at 10:01:00 PM PDT by

16 DIFFERENT HELLNOTES WITH GIN! is in the Antiques category