Shah Jahan Begam ruled Bhopal for over three decades, one of four consecutive women to govern the state — an almost singular dynastic succession in 19th-century South Asia. She was a capable administrator who cultivated British favor while maintaining genuine autonomy, and her coinage reflects that dual positioning: issued under her own name, not a regent's, in a period when most princely states were tightening their monetary ties to Calcutta. By 1888, the colonial pressure to abandon local copper issues entirely was already building.
Shah Jahan Begam ruled Bhopal for over three decades, one of four consecutive women to govern the state — an almost singular dynastic succession in 19th-century South Asia. She was a capable administrator who cultivated British favor while maintaining genuine autonomy, and her coinage reflects that dual positioning: issued under her own name, not a regent's, in a period when most princely states were tightening their monetary ties to Calcutta. By 1888, the colonial pressure to abandon local copper issues entirely was already building.