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Silver rupee of the East India Company

1835/1835

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

The word rupee is an English version of the Hindi word for a silver coin, rupya. The rupee has been the standard coinage of India since it became part of the Mughal Empire in the sixteenth century. The eighteenth century saw the collapse of Mughal power, resulting in a variety of coin standards and rupees issued by several regional rulers.

This silver rupee was minted in the Calcutta New Mint for the English East India Company in 1835. The Company had had growing trade interests in India since the 1600s, when it was given a British monopoly to trade in spices from the region. It began issuing its own coins in India in the 1640s, and from about 1750 was producing silver rupees. In the late eighteenth century coins struck in Britain were introduced in India. In 1835 the construction of the new Mint at Calcutta meant that all of British India could be supplied with a uniform coinage of British design, with the rupee as the principal silver coin.The British monarch's head remained on the rupee until Indian independence in 1947. The last British rupees were struck in nickel rather than silver, and the coin has continued to be struck by independent India in nickel, cupro-nickel, and latterly, stainless steel.

Details

  • Title: Silver rupee of the East India Company
  • Date Created: 1835/1835
  • Physical Dimensions: Weight: 11.630g; Diameter: 30.00mm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Registration number: 1922,0522.15
  • Production place: Minted in Calcutta
  • Material: silver
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Authority: Issuer British East India Company. Ruler William IV

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