Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Museums Victoria / CC-BY
Context
Years: 1862–1876
Country: India Country flag
Ruler: Victoria
Currency:
(1770—1947)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 115,464,249
Material
Diameter: 30.78 mm
Weight: 11.66 g
Silver weight: 10.69 g
Thickness: 1.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard473
Numista: #3345
Value
Bullion value: $30.39

Obverse

Description:
Queen Victoria left-facing crowned bust with surrounding lettering.
Inscription:
VICTORIA QUEEN
Script: Latin
Engraver: William Wyon

Reverse

Description:
A wreath encircles the date and denomination, divided by a line.
Inscription:
ONE

RUPEE

INDIA

1862
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1862
1862B
1862MBU
1862BBU
1862CBU
1874BU
1874B28,508,566BU
1874C15,013,834BU
1875B19,359,597BU
1875C11,631,951BU
1876B28,949,037BU
1876C12,001,264BU

Historical background

In 1862, British India stood at a pivotal moment in its monetary history, transitioning from a complex and chaotic system to one of imperial uniformity. Prior to this, the subcontinent operated with a bewildering array of currencies: Mughal-era silver rupees, gold mohurs, and countless local and princely state coinages circulated alongside various British-issued tokens and the silver dollar of the East India Company. This fragmentation severely hampered trade and governance, as exchange rates fluctuated wildly between regions and even between cities. The British administration, seeking to streamline the economy for more efficient revenue extraction and commercial integration, recognized the urgent need for a single, authoritative currency.

The key legislative change was the enactment of the Paper Currency Act of 1861, which came into practical effect in 1862. This act abolished the right of the Presidency Banks (in Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras) to issue notes and created a government monopoly over paper money through a new "Paper Currency Department." For the first time, uniform British Indian rupee notes were introduced, theoretically convertible to silver on demand. Simultaneously, the Indian Coinage Act of 1835 had already standardized the silver rupee as the sole legal tender, but the 1862 push consolidated its dominance in practice, systematically sidelining older, local coinages.

The move was a definitive step in integrating India into the British imperial economic sphere, facilitating the smooth transfer of colonial revenue (the "Home Charges") to London and binding Indian monetary policy to the needs of the Empire. However, the system remained firmly on a silver standard, which would soon pose significant challenges. Within a decade, the discovery of vast silver deposits abroad and the shift of major European powers to the gold standard would cause the value of silver to plummet globally. This led to a steep depreciation of the rupee, increasing India's external debt burden and causing severe economic instability—a direct and painful consequence of the currency regime solidified in 1862.

Series: 1862 India - British circulation coins

¼ Anna obverse
¼ Anna reverse
¼ Anna
1862-1894
½ Anna obverse
½ Anna reverse
½ Anna
1862-1876
2 Annas obverse
2 Annas reverse
2 Annas
1862-1876
¼ Rupee obverse
¼ Rupee reverse
¼ Rupee
1862-1876
½ Rupee obverse
½ Rupee reverse
½ Rupee
1862-1876
1 Rupee obverse
1 Rupee reverse
1 Rupee
1862-1876
1 Mohur obverse
1 Mohur reverse
1 Mohur
1862-1875
🌱 Common