Digital museum showcasing the collection of worldwide legends over the years! 千古不朽博物館展示多年來收藏的世界傳奇故事!
Awadh State
Wajid Ali Shah
AshrafiGold Coin
奧德土邦
瓦吉德·阿里·沙
阿什拉菲金幣
Item number: A1241
Year: AD 1852 (AH 1269)
Material: Gold
Size: 21.3 x 21.3 mm
Manufactured by: Lucknow Mint
Provenance: Spink 2024
This is an Ashrafi gold coin minted in Hijri year 1269 (AD 1852) during the reign of Wajid Ali Shah, the last ruler of Oudh State in north-central India. The obverse features the state’s distinctive emblem: a crown and parasol guarded by two sword-wielding mermaids on either side. Surrounding the emblem is an Urdu inscription, accompanied by five-petalled floral motifs indicating that the coin was struck in Lucknow. The reverse bears Urdu script with the name and titles of Wajid Ali Shah, along with the coin’s minting date, AH 1269, written in Persian numerals.
The Oudh State was the most prosperous province of the Mughal Empire. By the early 19th century, as the Mughal Empire declined, Oudh achieved dae facto independence but was increasingly subjected to interference by the British East India Company. In AD 1856, the British Governor-General of India, Lord Dalhousie, coerced Wajid Ali Shah into abdicating and exiled him to Calcutta. During the Indian Rebellion of AD 1857, Lucknow, located within Oudh’s territory, became a centre of fierce resistance against British rule. After the rebellion was suppressed, the British abolished Oudh State and reorganised it as part of the North-Western Provinces under the direct administration of the Governor-General.