By 1720, the Mughal Empire's currency system, once a pillar of its centralized power and economic integration, was under severe strain. The standard silver
rupee, established by Emperor Akbar, remained the primary unit of account and trade. However, the imperial treasury was chronically depleted due to decades of extravagant court expenditure, costly wars of succession, and the granting of vast revenue territories (
jagirs) to nobles, which diverted funds from the center. This fiscal weakness directly impacted the minting process, as the state struggled to maintain a consistent and high-volume output of specie from its mints.
The most significant development was the rise of regional
zabt (closed) mints. Powerful provincial governors and emerging regional kingdoms, like Bengal, Hyderabad, and the Maratha territories, began striking their own coins, often in direct imitation of the imperial design but with local control over purity and seigniorage. While these coins circulated widely, their varying standards created complexity in long-distance trade. Furthermore, the gold
mohur, though still minted, saw its fixed exchange rate with the silver rupee destabilize due to fluctuating bullion supplies, particularly from European trade, adding another layer of monetary uncertainty.
Consequently, the currency landscape was one of
decentralization and fragmentation. The imperial rupee from the Delhi, Agra, or Lahore mints still carried prestige, but its dominance was eroding. In practice, merchants and money-changers (
sarrafs) became crucial intermediaries, assessing the true value of countless coin varieties based on weight, fineness, and place of origin. This period thus marks a critical transition where the uniformity of Mughal currency, a symbol of imperial authority, began to fracture in tandem with the political decentralization of the empire itself.