The British East India Company's Ceylon coinage of this period emerged from a specific administrative problem: the island's existing monetary system, inherited through successive Portuguese and Dutch colonial rule, had left a chaotic mix of local and foreign currencies in circulation. The Company standardized copper fractions in part to displace the stuiver-based Dutch issues still trading at unpredictable rates in Colombo markets. This half cent denomination sat at the lowest practical threshold of that rationalization effort.
The British East India Company's Ceylon coinage of this period emerged from a specific administrative problem: the island's existing monetary system, inherited through successive Portuguese and Dutch colonial rule, had left a chaotic mix of local and foreign currencies in circulation. The Company standardized copper fractions in part to displace the stuiver-based Dutch issues still trading at unpredictable rates in Colombo markets. This half cent denomination sat at the lowest practical threshold of that rationalization effort.