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| 背面描述 | The reverse presents multiple lines of Devanagari and Persian-influenced script arranged across the square flan in the flowing, cursive register typical of Jaipur hammered brass coinage. The Christian era date 1942 is inscribed in the field, serving as the Gregorian calendar equivalent of the regal year shown on the obverse. Dot pellets are scattered throughout the field as decorative or regulatory marks. The overall die workmanship is characteristic of the Jaipur mint's later hand-struck issues produced under Maharaja Man Singh II. |
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| 铸造量 | 1942 |
| 附加信息 |
Man Singh II was technically a minor when Jaipur acceded to a new instrument of governance in the 1930s, with the state administered through a council of regents for much of his early reign. By 1942, wartime brass rationing across British India had begun affecting coinage decisions in multiple princely states simultaneously — Jaipur among them. The shift to brass for this denomination was practical, not ceremonial.
KM#190 is not particularly rare, but examples with clean surfaces are harder to locate than mintage assumptions would suggest, owing to the alloy's susceptibility to environmental patination in Rajasthan's climate.