Muhammad Shah I founded the Bahmani Sultanate's independent coinage tradition after Alauddin Bahman Shah broke from the Delhi Sultanate in 1347. By Muhammad Shah's reign, the Deccan court was actively distancing itself from northern monetary conventions, and the copper falus bore that administrative ambition directly — small, local, and issued for everyday market transactions in a sultanate still consolidating its territorial grip over the northern Deccan plateau. The eleven-year reign saw near-constant conflict with the Vijayanagara Empire to the south.
Muhammad Shah I founded the Bahmani Sultanate's independent coinage tradition after Alauddin Bahman Shah broke from the Delhi Sultanate in 1347. By Muhammad Shah's reign, the Deccan court was actively distancing itself from northern monetary conventions, and the copper falus bore that administrative ambition directly — small, local, and issued for everyday market transactions in a sultanate still consolidating its territorial grip over the northern Deccan plateau. The eleven-year reign saw near-constant conflict with the Vijayanagara Empire to the south.