In the late 17th century, Iran under the Safavid dynasty (1501–1736) faced a complex and deteriorating currency situation, symptomatic of broader economic strains. The primary circulating coin was the silver
abbasi (worth 200 dinars), alongside the gold
toman (a money of account equal to 10,000 dinars) and copper
fulus for small-scale trade. However, the period was marked by severe
debasement, as the state, often financially pressured by costly military campaigns, administrative costs, and court extravagance, systematically reduced the silver content of its coinage to create short-term revenue. This practice, while filling the royal treasury, eroded public trust in the currency's intrinsic value.
The debasement was exacerbated by a
chronic shortage of precious metals, particularly American silver which flowed into rival empires like the Ottomans but often bypassed Iran. Furthermore, the country suffered from a
significant trade imbalance with neighboring India. Iranian silver coins, already weakened, were exported in large quantities to pay for coveted Indian goods like textiles and spices, draining bullion from the economy. This "bullion drain" further reduced the material available for minting sound currency, creating a vicious cycle of scarcity and devaluation.
The consequences were felt across society. The unreliable currency disrupted
long-distance trade and market transactions, as merchants and traders struggled with fluctuating values and the hassle of weighing and assaying coins rather than counting them at face value. Internally, it contributed to price inflation and economic uncertainty, placing a burden on the populace and soldiers paid in devalued coin. While not yet catastrophic in 1670, these monetary weaknesses were a persistent undercurrent, undermining the economic foundations of the Safavid state and foreshadowing the more profound crises that would contribute to the empire's collapse in the 1720s.