DELHI SULTANS Muhammad V 48 rati 843 AH (1439/40 AD)

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DELHI SULTANS, Muhammad V, 1434-45, falus of 48 rati, 843 AH (1439/40 AD), Dehli, Obverse: legend, Reverse: legend, copper, 15mm, 5.03g, GG-D690, F-VF

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SKU: 3107223 Categories: ,

Description

Muhammad Shah Farid was the third of the Sayyid dynasty. He neglected governance in favor of fun. Territories were lost. Money was wasted.

Dehli is how Delhi is written in Arabic. The Dehli Sultans, or “slave kings of Delhi,” started out as Turkish slave soldiers (mamluks). As mamluks were often given positions of responsibility by their owners, there was a tendency for them to usurp power and establish dynasties, and that’s what happened in Delhi. The reference used for the coins is “The Coins of the Indian Sultanates,” by Goenka and Goron.

The earliest ancient Indian coins were the “bent bar” punchmarked silvers of the Achaemenid Persians occupying Gandhara in northwest Pakistan. By the 3rd century BC coins were in general use in most of India and Ceylon, and in subsequent centuries struck round coins in gold, silver, and copper came into use throughout the subcontinent and beyond to Southeast Asia and Pacific islands to Java and beyond.