Akbar's copper dam formed the base unit of his reorganized decimal coinage system, introduced in the 1560s as part of sweeping administrative reforms that also restructured land revenue and provincial governance. The Srinagar mint operated under Mughal authority following the empire's consolidation of Kashmir in 1586 — meaning any dam attributable to that facility dates to the latter portion of Akbar's reign, after the Kashmir campaign under Raja Man Singh and the formal absorption of the valley.
The dam's notoriously imprecise striking at provincial mints makes weight and fabric the primary attribution tools. KM#32.26 distinguishes Srinagar output from the dozens of other active Mughal copper mints by mint mark alone.
Akbar's copper dam formed the base unit of his reorganized decimal coinage system, introduced in the 1560s as part of sweeping administrative reforms that also restructured land revenue and provincial governance. The Srinagar mint operated under Mughal authority following the empire's consolidation of Kashmir in 1586 — meaning any dam attributable to that facility dates to the latter portion of Akbar's reign, after the Kashmir campaign under Raja Man Singh and the formal absorption of the valley.
The dam's notoriously imprecise striking at provincial mints makes weight and fabric the primary attribution tools. KM#32.26 distinguishes Srinagar output from the dozens of other active Mughal copper mints by mint mark alone.