Taimur Shah relocated the Afghan capital from Kandahar to Kabul in 1776, and his Kashmir mint operation reflects the administrative complexity of managing a realm that stretched from Khorasan to the Punjab frontier. Kashmir functioned as a revenue-generating province rather than a political center, and its mint output — including this copper dam — served local transactional needs that silver and gold issues simply could not efficiently fill at low denomination.
The dam as a unit had Mughal roots, and Afghan retention of the denomination in Kashmir was partly a practical concession to a population still accustomed to Mughal monetary conventions.
Taimur Shah relocated the Afghan capital from Kandahar to Kabul in 1776, and his Kashmir mint operation reflects the administrative complexity of managing a realm that stretched from Khorasan to the Punjab frontier. Kashmir functioned as a revenue-generating province rather than a political center, and its mint output — including this copper dam — served local transactional needs that silver and gold issues simply could not efficiently fill at low denomination.
The dam as a unit had Mughal roots, and Afghan retention of the denomination in Kashmir was partly a practical concession to a population still accustomed to Mughal monetary conventions.