Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1912–1936
Country: India Country flag
Ruler: George V
Currency:
(1770—1947)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 486,163,000
Material
Diameter: 17.4 mm
Weight: 1.65 g
Thickness: 1.1 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard509
Numista: #1110

Obverse

Description:
King George V left-facing portrait.
Inscription:
GEORGE V KING EMPEROR
Translation:
GEORGE V KING EMPEROR
Script: Latin
Language: English

Reverse

Description:
Denomination and date within beaded circle, wreath outside, mintmark under date.
Inscription:
1/12

ANNA

INDIA

1932
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Kolkata / Calcutta / Murshidabad
Mumbai / Bombay• (below date)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
191225,938,000
191316,149,000
191419,814,000
191520,563,000
191614,438,000
191735,174,000
191824,192,000
191917,472,000
192039,878,000
192119,334,000
19238,717,000
19238,429,000
19247,200,000
19249,869,000
19255,818,000
1925Proof
19256,415,000
1925Proof
19264,147,000
192615,464,000
19276,788,000
19276,662,000
19288,064,000
19286,135,000
192915,130,000
193013,498,000
193118,278,000
193223,213,000
193316,896,000
193417,146,000
193519,142,000
193623,313,000
193612,887,000

Historical background

In 1912, India's currency system was firmly under the control of the British Raj, operating on a gold-exchange standard established by the Indian Currency Act of 1899. The official monetary unit was the Indian Rupee, which was not a sovereign currency but a fixed token, pegged to British sterling at a rate of 1 rupee = 1 shilling 4 pence (or 15 rupees to £1). This ensured a stable exchange rate with Britain, facilitating the smooth repatriation of colonial revenues, profits, and trade surpluses—a core economic objective of imperial rule. While the rupee's value was defined in terms of gold, silver rupees remained the primary physical circulating medium for the vast population.

The system was managed by the India Office in London and implemented through the Paper Currency Act of 1861, which granted a monopoly on note issue to the Government of India. Currency notes, issued in denominations as low as 5 rupees, were "promissory notes" payable in silver on demand at any government treasury. However, a critical feature was the active management of gold and sterling reserves held both in India and, predominantly, in London. These reserves backed the rupee's stability, but this also meant India's monetary policy was subordinated to British interests and the needs of the imperial treasury.

This currency structure had profound economic consequences. It effectively linked India's money supply to its balance of payments, often leading to deflationary pressures that benefited the colonial administration and British creditors but burdened Indian debtors, especially the peasantry. Furthermore, the large sterling reserves in London, known as the "Home Charges," represented a continuous financial drain, used to pay for India's administrative costs in Britain, pensions, and imports. Thus, the 1912 currency system was not merely a financial arrangement but a pivotal instrument of colonial economic extraction, ensuring India's fiscal integration into and dependence on the British Empire.

Series: 1912 India - British circulation coins

1⁄12 Anna obverse
1⁄12 Anna reverse
1⁄12 Anna
1912-1936
½ Paisa obverse
½ Paisa reverse
½ Paisa
1912-1936
¼ Anna obverse
¼ Anna reverse
¼ Anna
1912-1936
1 Anna obverse
1 Anna reverse
1 Anna
1912-1936
2 Annas obverse
2 Annas reverse
2 Annas
1912-1917
¼ Rupee obverse
¼ Rupee reverse
¼ Rupee
1912-1936
½ Rupee obverse
½ Rupee reverse
½ Rupee
1912-1936
🌱 Very Common