Bhutan's early coinage was never produced by a centralized mint in any modern sense — dies were cut by hand, often inconsistently, and struck in small batches by local craftsmen. The Deb Raja system that authorized these issues was itself a fractured institution by the early nineteenth century, with real political authority having largely migrated to the Penlops, the regional governors whose rivalries periodically destabilized the country. A coin issued under "Deb Period II" tells you less about who actually held power than the catalog entry implies.
KM#5.2 is distinguished from the closely related 5.1 by subtle die differences that remain difficult to attribute with confidence given the handmade nature of production.
Bhutan's early coinage was never produced by a centralized mint in any modern sense — dies were cut by hand, often inconsistently, and struck in small batches by local craftsmen. The Deb Raja system that authorized these issues was itself a fractured institution by the early nineteenth century, with real political authority having largely migrated to the Penlops, the regional governors whose rivalries periodically destabilized the country. A coin issued under "Deb Period II" tells you less about who actually held power than the catalog entry implies.
KM#5.2 is distinguished from the closely related 5.1 by subtle die differences that remain difficult to attribute with confidence given the handmade nature of production.