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| Issuer | Hamburg, Free Hanseatic city of |
|---|---|
| Year | 1877 |
| Type | Non-circulating coin |
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| Obverse lettering | GEW . 450 GR . TROY 21/2 TOLA FEINGEH . 0.995 ✶ FEIN 447,75 GR . TROY ✶ (Translation: Weight 450 Troy grains. Feinness 0.995. 447.75 fine Troy grains.) |
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| Mintage | 1877: ND (1877) |
| Additional information |
Hamburg struck this piece specifically for trade in the Indian subcontinent, where the tola — a traditional South Asian unit of weight — was the dominant measure for silver in commercial transactions. The 2½ tola denomination was calculated to circulate alongside indigenous coinage and British Indian issues rather than compete with them. Hamburg's merchant class had pressing financial reasons to produce acceptable silver tender for eastern markets, and the city mint obliged with a purity level that matched or exceeded most competing trade issues.
Schaaf's reference records only a handful of surviving specimens, suggesting production was limited and the commercial experiment short-lived.