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3 Keping

Issuer East India Company (Sumatra)
Year 1788
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Value 3 Kepings (3⁄400)
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Obverse script Latin
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Reverse lettering ٣
تيكف
١٢٠٢
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Additional information

The East India Company's Sumatran copper issues of the late 18th century were minted primarily to facilitate trade at Bengkulu (Bencoolen), the Company's struggling west-coast Sumatran outpost that never quite delivered the pepper profits London had anticipated. The KM#Pn12 designation flags this piece as a pattern, meaning it was struck for approval rather than general release — making surviving examples products of the mint room rather than the marketplace.

Bengkulu remained a persistent drain on Company resources until its cession to the Dutch under the 1824 Anglo-Dutch Treaty.