Logo Title
obverse
reverse
David Mikeladze
Context
Years: 1740–1746
Issuer: Iran Issuer flag
Currency:
(1501—1798)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 23.11 mm
Weight: 11.4 g
Silver weight: 11.40 g
Thickness: 3.25 mm
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Hammered
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard385
Numista: #149192
Value
Bullion value: $32.86

Obverse

Description:
Persian couplet naming Nadir.
Inscription:
هست سلطان بر سلاطین جهان

شاه شاهان نادر صاحبقران

Reverse

Description:
Circle with date, mint تفليس (Tiflis), and ضرب ("struck").
Inscription:
١١٥٢

تفليس

ضرب

Edge

Hammered

Mints

NameMark
Tiflis

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1740
1746

Historical background

In 1740, Iran was in the midst of the Afsharid dynasty, founded by the formidable military leader Nader Shah. The currency situation was directly tied to his ambitious and costly campaigns. Having just returned from his devastating sack of Delhi in 1739, Nader Shah flooded the Iranian treasury with an immense haul of Mughal plunder, including vast quantities of gold, silver, and jewels. This sudden influx of precious metals temporarily stabilized the currency, which was primarily based on silver tomans and rials, and gold mohurs.

However, this apparent stability was superficial and precarious. Nader Shah’s currency system was fundamentally extractive, designed to finance his endless military expansions rather than to support a healthy domestic economy. He centralized minting and introduced new coinage, but the primary objective was to pay his large army, leading to heavy taxation and the requisition of supplies from the populace. The economy remained largely agrarian and fragmented, with the monetary wealth concentrated in the hands of the state and military elite, not circulating in a way that promoted trade or internal development.

Consequently, by 1740, the seeds of future monetary crisis were already sown. The economy could not sustainably support Nader Shah's extravagant military spending, and the wealth from India, while staggering, was a finite resource being rapidly depleted. Within a few years, as his campaigns continued and his rule became more oppressive, the treasury would be drained, leading to debased coinage, soaring inflation, and severe economic hardship for the common people, contributing to the instability that followed his assassination in 1747.

Series: 1740 Iran circulation coins

1 Rupee obverse
1 Rupee reverse
1 Rupee
1740-1746
10 Shahi obverse
10 Shahi reverse
10 Shahi
1740-1741
10 Shahi obverse
10 Shahi reverse
10 Shahi
1740-1747
1 Ashrafi obverse
1 Ashrafi reverse
1 Ashrafi
1740-1746
Legendary