Jaya Manikya ruled Tripura for a remarkably brief period in the 1570s, and coins attributable to his reign are correspondingly scarce. The Manikya dynasty had governed Tripura since at least the fourteenth century, maintaining a distinct coinage tradition that drew on both Bengali and broader Indo-Muslim conventions without being fully absorbed by either. This tanka sits in that tradition — a regional silver issue from a landlocked hill kingdom that managed to preserve meaningful autonomy even as Mughal power expanded across the Bengal plain to its west.
Jaya Manikya ruled Tripura for a remarkably brief period in the 1570s, and coins attributable to his reign are correspondingly scarce. The Manikya dynasty had governed Tripura since at least the fourteenth century, maintaining a distinct coinage tradition that drew on both Bengali and broader Indo-Muslim conventions without being fully absorbed by either. This tanka sits in that tradition — a regional silver issue from a landlocked hill kingdom that managed to preserve meaningful autonomy even as Mughal power expanded across the Bengal plain to its west.