Logo Title
obverse
reverse
miansaab
Context
Years: 1754–1773
Issuer: Afghanistan Issuer flag
Ruler: Ahmad Shah
Currency:
(1747—1891)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Weight: 11.3 g
Silver weight: 11.30 g
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard313
Numista: #108169
Value
Bullion value: $32.83

Obverse

Description:
Four-line inscription.
Script: Arabic

Reverse

Description:
Dated mint inscription.
Script: Arabic

Edge

Mints

NameMark
Dera

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1754
1755
1756
1759
1760
1761
1761
1762
1763
1764
1765
1766
1768
1769
1771
1772
1773

Historical background

In 1754, Afghanistan was not a unified nation-state but a contested region of shifting principalities and tribal confederacies, primarily under the loose hegemony of the Durrani Empire, founded just eight years earlier by Ahmad Shah Durrani. The currency situation reflected this political reality: it was decentralized, diverse, and tied to the broader economic networks of Central and South Asia. The primary unit of account was the silver rupee, but its weight, purity, and design varied significantly between different mint towns like Kabul, Kandahar, Herat, and Peshawar, each often under the control of local khans or Durrani-appointed governors who claimed the right of coinage (sikka).

The monetary system was a product of centuries of trade and conquest. Coins from the preceding Persian Safavid and Indian Mughal Empires remained in wide circulation alongside the new Durrani issues, creating a complex environment for commerce. Furthermore, the region's position on the Silk Road meant that foreign specie, including Persian abbasis, Indian mohurs, and even Russian ducats and Dutch lion dollars, could be found in major bazaars, their value determined by weight and intrinsic metal content rather than a central authority. The most important and reliable currency was the Kandahari rupee, minted in the empire's capital, which became a benchmark for trade due to its consistent silver standard.

This period was one of imperial consolidation, and Ahmad Shah Durrani understood that a stable currency was crucial for paying his army, collecting taxes, and facilitating the long-distance trade that enriched his treasury. Therefore, efforts were underway to impose a degree of uniformity, with the royal coinage bearing his name and titles in Persian script as a symbol of sovereignty. However, in 1754, this process was still in its early stages. The currency landscape remained fundamentally fragmented—a tangible reflection of the challenge of unifying a rugged, ethnically diverse territory where local power and cross-border trade often rivaled the authority of the nascent central state.

Series: 1754 Afghanistan circulation coins

1 Rupee obverse
1 Rupee reverse
1 Rupee
1754-1765
1 Rupee obverse
1 Rupee reverse
1 Rupee
1754-1773
1 Ashrafi obverse
1 Ashrafi reverse
1 Ashrafi
1754-1757
💎 Extremely Rare