Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Year: 1904
Islamic (Hijri) Year: 1322
Country: Yemen Country flag
Currency:
(1904—1918)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboardD1
Numista: #63077
Value
Exchange value: 1⁄80 YEI

Obverse

Script: Arabic

Reverse

Script: Arabic

Edge

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1904

Historical background

In 1904, the currency situation within the Zaidi Imamate of Yemen was characterized by fragmentation and instability, reflecting the broader political and economic challenges of the region. The Imamate, ruled by Imam Yahya Muhammad Hamid ed-Din, did not have a unified, modern monetary system. Instead, circulation was dominated by a mix of older, debased Ottoman coinage—particularly the silver qirsh (piastre)—and a variety of foreign silver coins, most notably the Austrian Maria Theresa thaler and the British Indian rupee. These foreign coins were valued by weight and purity, leading to complex and fluctuating exchange rates that hampered trade and state revenue collection.

This monetary disorder was a direct consequence of the Imamate's recent history. Following the gradual withdrawal of Ottoman forces from the Yemeni highlands after 1904 (formalized later in the 1911 Treaty of Daʿan), the nascent Zaidi state inherited an economic vacuum. The Ottoman Empire had previously introduced some standardized coinage, but its departure left a system in decay. Imam Yahya’s primary focus was on consolidating political and military control over the fractious tribes and confronting the Idrisi state to the north, leaving little immediate capacity to implement a comprehensive monetary reform. The economy remained largely subsistence-based and reliant on barter, with imported coins serving the limited needs of regional and long-distance trade.

Therefore, the currency situation in 1904 was not one of state-controlled policy but of ad-hoc adaptation. The lack of a sovereign coinage symbolized the Imamate's limited administrative reach and its struggle to transition from a tribal confederation under a religious leader to a modern nation-state. It would take decades before Imam Yahya’s government could begin to address this issue, with the first attempts at minting distinct Zaidi coinage only emerging much later, in the 1920s and 1930s, as part of a broader effort to assert independence and sovereignty.

Series: 1904 Yemeni Zaidi State circulation coins

1⁄40 Riyal obverse
1⁄40 Riyal reverse
1⁄40 Riyal
1904-1921
Halala obverse
Halala reverse
Halala
1904
1⁄80 Riyal obverse
1⁄80 Riyal reverse
1⁄80 Riyal
1904
Legendary