The silver coin of the Qing Dynasty, one yuan with a long bearded dragon, was minted by the Tianjin Mint in the third year of Xuantong of the Qing Dynasty (1911). At that time, the Qing government wanted to unify the currency system and hired overseas senior technicians to carefully design and manufacture this set of Qing silver coins for the third year of Xuantong. There were six or seven formats, and the bearded dragon was one of them. The trial minting of new coins had just been successful, which coincided with the Wuchang Uprising, so most of the new silver coins were stillborn, leaving only a small number of sample coins. The bearded dragon is named after the long beard on the back of the dragon head. It is a specimen and is valued because of its exquisite pattern and rare existence. The silver coin of the Qing Dynasty, one yuan with a bearded dragon, is a new imitation in recent years. The specific steps are to first carve the original mold according to the image of the bearded dragon in the silver coin catalog, and then cast the counterfeit. Since imitating silver coins is much more difficult than imitating ancient coins, if you don't rely on high-tech computers to imitate, but use manual imitation, there will definitely be many loopholes. The left and right flowers and plants on the front of this imitation have no three-dimensional effect, the dragon scales on the back are messy, the cloud pattern is severely deformed, and an English GI signature is added to the lower left paw, pretending to be a signature version. The coin body is rough and sanding marks can be seen everywhere.