Sikandar Jah, the third Nizam of Hyderabad, ruled under increasingly uncomfortable terms with the East India Company following the Subsidiary Alliance his predecessor had signed in 1798. Hyderabad retained the right to strike its own coinage — one of the few markers of sovereignty the Company permitted to stand — but the Nizam's financial autonomy was steadily eroded throughout his reign. He died in 1829, which creates an immediate problem: this coin's attributed date range of 1838–1848 falls entirely after his death.
The discrepancy almost certainly reflects the common Hyderabad practice of continuing to strike rupees in a deceased ruler's name for years afterward, a pattern well-documented in the princely states where regal years on coinage lagged behind political reality by a decade or more.
Sikandar Jah, the third Nizam of Hyderabad, ruled under increasingly uncomfortable terms with the East India Company following the Subsidiary Alliance his predecessor had signed in 1798. Hyderabad retained the right to strike its own coinage — one of the few markers of sovereignty the Company permitted to stand — but the Nizam's financial autonomy was steadily eroded throughout his reign. He died in 1829, which creates an immediate problem: this coin's attributed date range of 1838–1848 falls entirely after his death.
The discrepancy almost certainly reflects the common Hyderabad practice of continuing to strike rupees in a deceased ruler's name for years afterward, a pattern well-documented in the princely states where regal years on coinage lagged behind political reality by a decade or more.