Baccha-i Saqao — "Son of the Water Carrier" — seized Kabul in January 1929 after Amanullah Khan's modernization program triggered a tribal revolt, but these notes carry the 1928 date, placing them at the very cusp of that collapse. His reign lasted less than nine months before Nadir Khan's forces captured and executed him in October 1929. The currency he issued during that brief interregnum is among the rarest of all Afghan paper money, produced under a government that most of the outside world refused to recognize.
The handstamp authentication reflects improvised state infrastructure — not an unusual security feature for a rebel administration issuing paper under fire.
Baccha-i Saqao — "Son of the Water Carrier" — seized Kabul in January 1929 after Amanullah Khan's modernization program triggered a tribal revolt, but these notes carry the 1928 date, placing them at the very cusp of that collapse. His reign lasted less than nine months before Nadir Khan's forces captured and executed him in October 1929. The currency he issued during that brief interregnum is among the rarest of all Afghan paper money, produced under a government that most of the outside world refused to recognize.
The handstamp authentication reflects improvised state infrastructure — not an unusual security feature for a rebel administration issuing paper under fire.