Kelantan's tin coinage of the late nineteenth century occupied an awkward monetary position — nominally issued by the sultanate but circulating alongside Siamese tributary obligations and an influx of Chinese merchant tokens that frequently outcompeted local issues in everyday trade. The "Khalifat al-Karim" titulature on this piece refers to Sultan Muhammad IV, who held the throne during a period when Siamese suzerainty over Kelantan was still the operative political reality, years before the 1909 Anglo-Siamese Treaty transferred the northern Malay states to British protection.
Tin was the only practical coinage metal available domestically, though its softness made long-circulating examples difficult to attribute with confidence.
Kelantan's tin coinage of the late nineteenth century occupied an awkward monetary position — nominally issued by the sultanate but circulating alongside Siamese tributary obligations and an influx of Chinese merchant tokens that frequently outcompeted local issues in everyday trade. The "Khalifat al-Karim" titulature on this piece refers to Sultan Muhammad IV, who held the throne during a period when Siamese suzerainty over Kelantan was still the operative political reality, years before the 1909 Anglo-Siamese Treaty transferred the northern Malay states to British protection.
Tin was the only practical coinage metal available domestically, though its softness made long-circulating examples difficult to attribute with confidence.