The Cairo mint operated under Ottoman authority throughout this period but maintained distinct production standards from Constantinople — these small gold pieces were struck specifically for Egyptian circulation, where the qirsh-based accounting system persisted long after Ottoman monetary reforms had reorganized other provincial currencies. Egypt's semi-autonomous status under the Khedival administration meant the Cairo facility answered to competing fiscal pressures, and the extremely low weight of this denomination reflects chronic gold supply constraints rather than any deliberate debasement policy.
The Cairo mint operated under Ottoman authority throughout this period but maintained distinct production standards from Constantinople — these small gold pieces were struck specifically for Egyptian circulation, where the qirsh-based accounting system persisted long after Ottoman monetary reforms had reorganized other provincial currencies. Egypt's semi-autonomous status under the Khedival administration meant the Cairo facility answered to competing fiscal pressures, and the extremely low weight of this denomination reflects chronic gold supply constraints rather than any deliberate debasement policy.