Pakistan's first coinage series was issued in the immediate aftermath of Partition, with the government scrambling to establish a monetary infrastructure essentially from scratch in 1947–48. The Royal Mint in London struck the initial pieces while Pakistan's own minting capacity was nonexistent — the subcontinent's only established mint remained in Calcutta, now firmly in Indian territory.
The bronze composition directly continued the pre-Partition British Indian pice standard, a pragmatic continuity that kept the new currency interchangeable in daily commerce during a chaotic transition period.
Pakistan's first coinage series was issued in the immediate aftermath of Partition, with the government scrambling to establish a monetary infrastructure essentially from scratch in 1947–48. The Royal Mint in London struck the initial pieces while Pakistan's own minting capacity was nonexistent — the subcontinent's only established mint remained in Calcutta, now firmly in Indian territory.
The bronze composition directly continued the pre-Partition British Indian pice standard, a pragmatic continuity that kept the new currency interchangeable in daily commerce during a chaotic transition period.