Qandahar operated as a semi-autonomous mint city during the fracturing of Durrani Afghan power in the early nineteenth century, and coins struck here in this period reflect that instability — local governors asserting monetary authority as Kabul's grip weakened following the death of Zaman Shah and the fratricidal struggles among his successors. The "Qaisar" attribution on this type refers to a local honorific, not a separately governed polity, making the issuing authority somewhat contested among specialists.
KM#148 is thinly documented in auction records, which likely reflects genuine scarcity rather than collector indifference.
Qandahar operated as a semi-autonomous mint city during the fracturing of Durrani Afghan power in the early nineteenth century, and coins struck here in this period reflect that instability — local governors asserting monetary authority as Kabul's grip weakened following the death of Zaman Shah and the fratricidal struggles among his successors. The "Qaisar" attribution on this type refers to a local honorific, not a separately governed polity, making the issuing authority somewhat contested among specialists.
KM#148 is thinly documented in auction records, which likely reflects genuine scarcity rather than collector indifference.