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Bengal Presidency
¼ Mohur
孟加拉管轄區
¼ 莫哈爾
Item number: A1161-2
Year: AD 1789 (AH 1204)
Material: Gold
Size: 16.8 x 16.5 x 0.6 mm
Weight: 3.1 g
Manufactured by: Murshidabad Mint
Provenance: Morton & Eden 2024
This is a ¼ mohur gold coin from the year AH 1204 (AD 1789), issued by the Bengal Presidency of the British East India Company, headquartered in Calcutta, imitating the Mughal Empire’s style. The coin is remarkably small, with milled edges featuring diagonal striations. On the obverse, in Persian script, the name and title of the then-seventeenth Mughal Emperor, Shah Alam II, “سهاه الام بادساه” (Shah Alam Badshah), are inscribed. The upper edge bears the minting year in Persian numerals, “۱۲۰۴” (AH 1204), while the centre is adorned with a miniature decorative motif of a five-petalled flower and dot.
The reverse side of the coin also features Persian inscriptions. From top to bottom, it reads “سانات ۱۹” (Sanat 19) and “زارب مورشیداباد” (Zarb Murshidabad), which together translate to “Year 19 of the reign (of the sovereign), minted in Murshidabad.” The upper edge is adorned with miniature five-petalled floral and dot motifs, as well as floral totems on either side. Murshidabad, a significant commercial city and political centre in the Bengal region, was renowned for its silk and attracted European traders from Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Denmark. The Mughal Empire had established a mint in this city.
The Bengal Presidency can be traced back to AD 1612, when the British East India Company established trade in the Bay of Bengal, centred around Calcutta. In AD 1765, the Company acquired tax collection rights over the region from the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II, officially founding the Bengal Presidency. In AD 1793, the Company further consolidated its power by obtaining judicial authority over the area. By the 19th century, as British influence expanded across South Asia, the Bengal Presidency’s jurisdiction grew to encompass territories such as Burma, the Malay Peninsula, Singapore, and various islands in the Indian Ocean.