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| 背面描述 | Central field contains a multi-line Persian and Arabic calligraphic inscription recording the mint name and regnal invocation: 'zarb dar-ul-khilafat Shahjahanabad khallad Allah mulkahu 1151' ('Struck at the seat of the Caliphate, Shahjahanabad — may Allah perpetuate his kingdom — [AH] 1151'). The mint epithet 'dar-ul-khilafat' (seat of the Caliphate) reflects Nader Shah's use of the Mughal imperial capital's prestige following his sack of Delhi in 1739. The AH date 1151 corresponds to 1739 CE. The inscription is disposed in horizontal registers across the hammered flan in a style consistent with Afsharid provincial coinage struck at captured Mughal mints. |
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| 背面铭文 | خلد الله ملکه ضرب دارالخلافه شاه جهان آباد ۱۱٥۱ (Translation: Struck at the seat of the Caliphate, Shahjahanabad, may Allah perpetuate his kingdom, 1151) |
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| 铸币厂 | 登录 以查看详情 |
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| 附加信息 |
Nader Shah seized Delhi in March 1739 and within weeks had stripped the Mughal treasury of an estimated 700 million rupees in coin, bullion, and jewels — enough that he suspended taxation across Iran for three years upon his return. These occupation rupees struck at Shahjahanabad are among the few physical artifacts of that plunder operating in reverse: Mughal infrastructure, Mughal silver, Afsharid authority. The mint at Shahjahanabad functioned under Nader's control for only a matter of months before he withdrew northward.