Mughal ; Akbar ; Silver Rupee ; Mint : Karrah ( partial traces ) ; mint-name in bottom quadrant ; AH 969 ; Extremely fine ; Very rare

14,000.00

Mughal ; Akbar ; Silver Rupee ; Mint : Karrah ( partial traces ) ; mint-name in bottom quadrant ; AH 969 ; Extremely fine ; Very rare

1 in stock

Description

Description

Mughal ; Akbar ; Silver Rupee ; Mint : Karrah ( partial traces ) ; mint-name in bottom quadrant ; AH 969 ; Extremely fine ; Very rare ; Weight : 11.47 Grams ; NOTE : Karrah is a place of well-known historic and strategic importance. Akbar received Karrah from Raja Ramachandra of Bhatha when he was subjugated in mid-1562 (AH969). Ramachandra agreed to be a vassal of Akbar and paid tribute to him, apart from surrendering the region around Karrah to Akbar. Akbar made Karrah an administrative and strategic centre for his campaigns in Central India – his commander Asaf Khan, the architect of these campaigns, was the fief-holder at Karrah. The known dates on these coins coincide perfectly with these campaigns so it is logical to assume that the mint was run to pay the soldiers engaged in Asaf Khan’s army. It has been sometimes spelt at Karrah, Kada and Kurrah but actually it is Kara (in Hindi कड़ा and Urdu ﮐﺮﻩ) and often called with its sister town across the river Ganges called Manikpur. Kara falls in Kaushambi district while Manikpur has now become a part of Partapgarh District ;

Additional information

Additional information

Denomination

Material

Silver

Weight

11.47

Shipping Charges

100

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