This issue belongs to the final years of Mahmud II's reign, a period when the Ottoman administration was attempting to modernize and rationalize Egypt's monetary system following decades of chaotic billon and copper coinage under Muhammad Ali. The Cairo Mint was operating under a peculiar dual authority at this moment — nominally Ottoman, practically Alid — which is reflected in the inconsistent quality of copper strikes from this period.
Cairo's copper output in the mid-1830s is known for irregular planchet preparation and variable striking pressure, making well-preserved survivors less a matter of careful circulation history and more a function of which part of the die they happened to land under.
This issue belongs to the final years of Mahmud II's reign, a period when the Ottoman administration was attempting to modernize and rationalize Egypt's monetary system following decades of chaotic billon and copper coinage under Muhammad Ali. The Cairo Mint was operating under a peculiar dual authority at this moment — nominally Ottoman, practically Alid — which is reflected in the inconsistent quality of copper strikes from this period.
Cairo's copper output in the mid-1830s is known for irregular planchet preparation and variable striking pressure, making well-preserved survivors less a matter of careful circulation history and more a function of which part of the die they happened to land under.