Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Limbru CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Year: 1960
Islamic (Hijri) Year: 1379
Issuer: Maldives Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1947)
Total mintage: 301,270
Material
Diameter: 15 mm
Weight: 1.5 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard43
Numista: #22004
Value
Exchange value: 0.01 MVR

Obverse

Description:
National emblem separates Gregorian and Islamic dates.
Inscription:
1960 ١٣٧٩
Scripts: Arabic, Latin

Reverse

Description:
Valuable
Inscription:
ملك محلديب

1

ލާރި
Translation:
King of Maldives
1
Lari
Script: Arabic
Languages: Arabic, Dhivehi

Edge

Plain

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint (Tower Hill)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1960300,000
19601,270Proof

Historical background

In the 1960s, the Maldives operated under a dual currency system that reflected its historical economic ties and its status as a British protectorate. The official currency was the Maldivian Rupee (also known as the Rufiyaa), which was pegged to the Indian Rupee at par. This linkage was a legacy of centuries of trade and cultural exchange with the Indian subcontinent, and Indian Rupee notes and coins circulated widely alongside the locally issued Maldivian currency. The economy was overwhelmingly based on subsistence fishing and small-scale agriculture, with limited foreign exchange earnings primarily from the export of dried fish (Maldive fish) to Sri Lanka.

Simultaneously, the British Pound Sterling played a significant, albeit unofficial, role due to the presence of a Royal Air Force base on Gan Island in the southern Addu Atoll, established during World War II. The base, which operated until 1976, injected Sterling directly into the local economy of the south, creating a parallel monetary zone. This led to practical complexities, as transactions in the capital, Malé, and the northern atolls were conducted in Rupees, while the economy around Gan functioned largely on Sterling, highlighting a fragmented monetary landscape within the small archipelago.

This dual system was increasingly seen as inefficient and restrictive for a nation seeking greater economic autonomy. The peg to the Indian Rupee, while stable, did not serve the Maldives' specific developmental needs. Consequently, the decade set the stage for a major monetary reform. In 1960, the Maldivian government began the process of establishing a more independent and unified currency system, which would culminate in the creation of a new decimalized Rufiyaa in 1961, divided into 100 laari, and the establishment of the Maldives Monetary Authority in 1981.

Series: 1960 Maldives circulation coins

1 Laari obverse
1 Laari reverse
1 Laari
1960
2 Laari obverse
2 Laari reverse
2 Laari
1960
5 Laari obverse
5 Laari reverse
5 Laari
1960-1970
5 Laari obverse
5 Laari reverse
5 Laari
1960
10 Laari obverse
10 Laari reverse
10 Laari
1960
10 Laari obverse
10 Laari reverse
10 Laari
1960-1979
25 Laari obverse
25 Laari reverse
25 Laari
1960-1979
🌟 Uncommon