Akbar's silver rupee established the weight standard — 11.4 grams, near-pure silver — that would anchor Mughal monetary policy for over a century and influence British Indian coinage well into the nineteenth century. The Tatta mint, situated in lower Sindh near the Indus delta, was strategically critical: Akbar captured the city in 1591 during his Sindh campaign, and its mint output helped consolidate imperial economic control over a region that had long resisted Mughal authority.
Tatta pieces frequently show uneven flan preparation, a known characteristic of the mint rather than post-strike damage.
Akbar's silver rupee established the weight standard — 11.4 grams, near-pure silver — that would anchor Mughal monetary policy for over a century and influence British Indian coinage well into the nineteenth century. The Tatta mint, situated in lower Sindh near the Indus delta, was strategically critical: Akbar captured the city in 1591 during his Sindh campaign, and its mint output helped consolidate imperial economic control over a region that had long resisted Mughal authority.
Tatta pieces frequently show uneven flan preparation, a known characteristic of the mint rather than post-strike damage.