Akbar's rupee coinage underwent a deliberate administrative overhaul in the 1570s when he standardized weights and finenesses across the empire's mints — a reform tied directly to his broader revenue system, the Dahsala, which required a reliable silver unit for tax assessment. The "Year & Month" type reflects that bureaucratic precision: coins were struck recording both the regnal year and the lunar month of production, an unusually granular dating system for the period.
Multiple mints operated simultaneously under this type, and attribution to a specific facility depends on mint marks that are frequently faint or partially struck.
Akbar's rupee coinage underwent a deliberate administrative overhaul in the 1570s when he standardized weights and finenesses across the empire's mints — a reform tied directly to his broader revenue system, the Dahsala, which required a reliable silver unit for tax assessment. The "Year & Month" type reflects that bureaucratic precision: coins were struck recording both the regnal year and the lunar month of production, an unusually granular dating system for the period.
Multiple mints operated simultaneously under this type, and attribution to a specific facility depends on mint marks that are frequently faint or partially struck.