Jaipur's coinage under Madho Singh II occupied a peculiar administrative limbo — the British Raj permitted certain princely states to continue striking their own silver issues well into the twentieth century, provided the coins met weight and fineness standards broadly compatible with imperial coinage. Jaipur was among the more prolific of these, operating its own mint at a time when most princely issues had already been absorbed into British India's unified currency system.
Madho Singh II reigned until 1922, and the overlap of his name with Victoria's on issues struck after her 1901 death reflects the slow bureaucratic pace at which Jaipur updated its coin types.
Jaipur's coinage under Madho Singh II occupied a peculiar administrative limbo — the British Raj permitted certain princely states to continue striking their own silver issues well into the twentieth century, provided the coins met weight and fineness standards broadly compatible with imperial coinage. Jaipur was among the more prolific of these, operating its own mint at a time when most princely issues had already been absorbed into British India's unified currency system.
Madho Singh II reigned until 1922, and the overlap of his name with Victoria's on issues struck after her 1901 death reflects the slow bureaucratic pace at which Jaipur updated its coin types.