Uncover details about Coins in Medieval India - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Uncover details about Coins in Medieval India

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Uncover all the details of medieval coins of India at Mintage World where it offers detailed information in precise manner. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Uncover details about Coins in Medieval India


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Uncover details about Coins in Medieval India
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  • The coming of the Medieval Period in India meant
    that Indian coinage had established a new novel
    pattern.
  • The illustration of figures is largely plain in
    Islam. Thus, like the other coinage of the
    Islamic world, Indian coins too, have a few
    outstanding exceptions, carried inscriptions on
    both sides in Arabic or Persian script.
  • In Islam, the inscribing of the ruler's name on
    the coins was accompanied with elegance. This
    license, with the reading of his name in the
    khutba (public prayer) signified the definite
    assuming of legal power by him.

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  • Medieval Indian era brought a series of barbaric,
    invading sinister rulers from Persia, Arab and
    Turkey, precisely by Mahmud of Ghazni and
    Muhammad Ghori.
  • The Arabs had conquered Sindh in 712 A.D. and
    ruled it as a province of the Caliphate. By 9th
    century A.D., provincial governors publically
    declared an independent rule and also begun to
    make their own coins.
  • Medieval Indian coins and art of casting them had
    received its first stamp under the brutal and
    ruthless Mahmud of Ghazni.

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  • The arrival of Turkish Sultans of Delhi in the
    12th century got a much-needed break, with the
    past and the still-subsisting motifs. However,
    they were replaced by Islamic tools.
  • Coins in Medieval India created their own path of
    movement under major metamorphoses.
  • The unit of account came to be strengthened and
    was referred as the 'tanka' with the 'jittals' as
    the smaller value coins.
  • A standardisation followed after the Delhi
    Sultanate. This period was good as it resulted in
    substantial expansion of money. Coins were cast
    and moulded in gold, silver and copper.

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  • When the Lodhi Dynasty arrived, coins were
    moulded absolutely of copper and billon.
  • Even in the provinces, the Bengal Sultans, the
    Jaunpur Sultans, the Bahamanis of the Deccan, the
    Sultans of Malwa, the Sultans of Gujarat, etc.
    had begun to create coins.
  • But, the picture down South was totally
    different, the Vijayanagara Empire had evolved a
    coinage of unique metrology and design, which
    remained standard in the region and influence
    coin designing up to the 19th century. These were
    the few of Medieval Coins of India.
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