The "Partagali Math" — formally the Shri Gopalakrishna Math at Partagali in Goa — is one of the oldest Vaishnava institutions on the Konkan coast, with origins traced to the fifteenth century and a lineage of pontiffs that survived the Portuguese Inquisition largely by relocating inland. The commemorative issue marks the math's continued prominence as a living religious and cultural institution rather than any single anniversary.
The .500 fineness is characteristic of India's commemorative rupee program from the 2010s onward, where the Reserve Bank shifted away from the higher-purity .500+ alloys used in earlier decades.
The "Partagali Math" — formally the Shri Gopalakrishna Math at Partagali in Goa — is one of the oldest Vaishnava institutions on the Konkan coast, with origins traced to the fifteenth century and a lineage of pontiffs that survived the Portuguese Inquisition largely by relocating inland. The commemorative issue marks the math's continued prominence as a living religious and cultural institution rather than any single anniversary.
The .500 fineness is characteristic of India's commemorative rupee program from the 2010s onward, where the Reserve Bank shifted away from the higher-purity .500+ alloys used in earlier decades.