Catalog
| Issuer | Vientiane, Kingdom of |
|---|---|
| Year | 1707-1828 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | Log in to see details |
| Currency | Log in to see details |
| Composition | Silver (.848) |
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| Diameter | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
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| Reverse description | Plain cast silver surface, irregular in contour and texture, consistent with the reverse face of a 'tiger tongue' ingot currency. The surface displays characteristic casting marks and minor imperfections typical of artisanal silver casting practices of the Vientiane Kingdom period. |
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| Mintage | ND (1707-1828) |
| Additional information |
The tamlung was a traditional Lao unit of account equal to four baht, and the 1½ tamlung denomination placed this piece at the upper end of everyday transactional silver in the Vientiane kingdom. Vientiane functioned as one of the three successor states following the fragmentation of Lan Xang after 1707 — the same fracture that produced rival kingdoms at Luang Prabang and Champasak. That political division, sustained by Siamese and Vietnamese interference across the eighteenth century, makes coherent attribution of undated bullet-form issues notoriously difficult.
The KM– reference signals this type has not been formally catalogued in Krause, leaving provenance largely dependent on collection history and assay results.