The Gujarat Sultanate's coinage during the 1450s falls within the reign of Qutb ud-Din Ahmad Shah II, a ruler whose brief time on the throne left administrative records thin enough that attribution of copper fractions from this period remains genuinely contested among specialists. The "non identifié" designation here is honest — Gujarat copper of this denomination resists clean attribution more than the silver does, partly because provincial minting points struck with considerable autonomy and irregular die quality.
The Gujarat Sultanate's coinage during the 1450s falls within the reign of Qutb ud-Din Ahmad Shah II, a ruler whose brief time on the throne left administrative records thin enough that attribution of copper fractions from this period remains genuinely contested among specialists. The "non identifié" designation here is honest — Gujarat copper of this denomination resists clean attribution more than the silver does, partly because provincial minting points struck with considerable autonomy and irregular die quality.