Mohur

"Gold mohur" redirects here. For the hotel in Aden, see Gold Mohur Hotel.
For the city in Iran, see Mohr, Fars.
One and Two Mohur coins
of British India
1862 One Mohur
1835 Two Mohur[nb 1]

A mohur is a gold coin that was formerly minted by several governments, including British India and some of the princely states which existed alongside it, the Mughal Empire, Nepal, and Afghanistan. It was usually equivalent in value to fifteen silver rupees. It was last minted in British India in 1918, but some princely states continued to issue the coins until their accession to India after 1947. Similar coins were also issued by the British authorities in denominations of 2/3 mohur (10 rupees), 1/3 mohur (5 rupees) and the double mohur (30 rupees), and some of the princely states issued half-mohur coins (equal to 7 rupees and 8 anna).

The mohur coin was first introduced by Sher Shah Suri during his rule in India between 1540 and 1545 and was then a gold coin weighing 169 grains (10.95 grams). He also introduced copper coins called dam and silver coins called rupiya that weighed 178 grains (11.53 grams).[3] Later on, the Mughal emperors standardized this coinage of tri-metallism across the sub-continent in order to consolidate the monetary system.

Etymology

The word mohur or mohor is from the Persian word muhr, which means "seal" and is cognate with the Sanskrit word mudra which also means "seal".

Collector value

Gold mohurs issued by the Moghul Empire, the British East India Company or the British Crown are valuable collector items and sell in auctions for lakhs of rupees. The double mohur (minted between 1835 and 1918) with a value of 30 rupees is the highest denomination circulating coin issued till date. An 1835 double mohur was sold at a Bangalore auction for Rs. 11.5 lakhs making it the highest ever coin bid in India.[4]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. The 1835 double mohur, also called ashrafi, on average contains 23.32 grams of gold (0.9170 fine) and weighs 0.6875 of an ounce.[1] Only 1,170 were minted.[2]

Notes

  1. Cuhaj, George S., ed. (2009b). Standard Catalog of World Coins 1801–1900 (6 ed.). Krause. p. 752. ISBN 978-0-89689-940-7.
  2. Cuhaj, George S., ed. (2009a). Standard Catalog of World Gold Coins 1601–Present (6 ed.). Krause. p. 818. ISBN 978-1-4402-0424-1.
  3. Mughal Coinage at RBI Monetary Museum. Retrieved on May 4, 2008.
  4. Collector mints a fortune from coin auction


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