Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Museums Victoria / CC-BY
Context
Years: 1903–1910
Country: India Country flag
Ruler: Edward VII
Currency:
(1770—1947)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 117,544,198
Material
Diameter: 15.4 mm
Weight: 1.46 g
Silver weight: 1.34 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard505
Numista: #18621
Value
Bullion value: $3.89

Obverse

Description:
Edward VII bust, right profile
Inscription:
EDWARD VII KING AND EMPEROR
Translation:
EDWARD VII KING AND EMPEROR
Language: English

Reverse

Description:
Crown over denomination in English and Urdu, date below, flanked by sprays.
Inscription:
TWO

ANNAS

INDIA

دو آنہ

1906
Translation:
Two Annas

India

Two Annas

1906
Languages: Urdu, English

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
190314,631,520
190419,303,364
190513,030,928
190622,144,648
190721,600,000
19086,768,912
19091,603,811
191016,760,000
19101,701,015

Historical background

In 1903, the currency system of British India was a complex and managed bimetallic standard, officially tied to both gold and silver but effectively operating on a sterling exchange standard. The foundational Indian Coinage Act of 1893 had closed the government mints to the free coinage of silver, severing the direct link between the silver rupee and its metallic value. This move, known as the "closing of the mints," was a response to the global collapse of silver prices, which had caused the rupee's external value to plummet, creating severe economic instability and a drain on government finances. The rupee's value was now artificially pegged at 1s 4d (one shilling and four pence), or 15 rupees to the British gold sovereign, a rate maintained through active government management of currency circulation.

The system's stability relied on a delicate mechanism controlled by the India Office in London. To obtain rupees, banks and traders had to present sterling bills in London, which the Secretary of State would then use to purchase silver bullion for minting coins in India. This "council bill" system effectively made the rupee a token currency, its supply regulated by demand for remittances to India. While this stabilized exchange rates with Britain and facilitated imperial trade and capital flows, it was often criticized for being deflationary and subjecting the Indian economy to the priorities of British creditors and administrators, with little regard for domestic monetary needs.

Consequently, the currency situation was a source of significant tension. Indian nationalist economists argued the system prioritized British financial interests, extracting wealth through a "home charges" drain while causing periodic liquidity crises within India. The government held substantial gold reserves in London as a guarantee, but the rupee remained a silver coin in daily use. Thus, in 1903, the currency was in a transitional, managed state—no longer a traditional silver standard, not yet a full gold standard, but a colonial sterling-exchange standard designed above all to ensure efficient fiscal transfer and commercial integration with the British Empire.

Series: 1903 India - British circulation coins

1 Pie obverse
1 Pie reverse
1 Pie
1903-1906
½ Paisa obverse
½ Paisa reverse
½ Paisa
1903-1906
¼ Anna obverse
¼ Anna reverse
¼ Anna
1903-1906
2 Annas obverse
2 Annas reverse
2 Annas
1903-1910
¼ Rupee obverse
¼ Rupee reverse
¼ Rupee
1903-1910
1 Rupee obverse
1 Rupee reverse
1 Rupee
1903-1910
🌱 Common