The Sultanate of Pahang in the sixteenth century occupied an awkward political position — nominally independent but repeatedly pressured by the expanding Portuguese presence at Malacca after 1511 and by Siamese tributary demands from the north. Tin coinage of this period reflects the region's primary export commodity; Pahang's river systems yielded some of the peninsula's richest alluvial tin deposits, which simultaneously funded the sultanate and attracted foreign interference.
Muzaffar Shah's pitis issues are poorly documented in Western numismatic literature, and surviving examples in attributable condition remain scarce. Most circulated heavily in local bazaar trade before being melted for the same tin that gave them value.
The Sultanate of Pahang in the sixteenth century occupied an awkward political position — nominally independent but repeatedly pressured by the expanding Portuguese presence at Malacca after 1511 and by Siamese tributary demands from the north. Tin coinage of this period reflects the region's primary export commodity; Pahang's river systems yielded some of the peninsula's richest alluvial tin deposits, which simultaneously funded the sultanate and attracted foreign interference.
Muzaffar Shah's pitis issues are poorly documented in Western numismatic literature, and surviving examples in attributable condition remain scarce. Most circulated heavily in local bazaar trade before being melted for the same tin that gave them value.