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  2. Mughal currency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_currency

    Gold mohur of Akbar. Mughal currency was coinage produced and used within the Mughal empire.. Despite India having significant gold reserves, the Mughal coins were produced primarily from imported bullion, as a result of the empire's strong export-driven economy, with global demand for Indian agricultural and industrial products drawing a steady stream of precious metals into India.

  3. Tarikh-i Shahrukhi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarikh-i_Shahrukhi

    The Tarikh-i Shahrukhi (Persian: تاریخ شاهرخی) is a Persian chronicle about the Khanate of Kokand, composed in 1871/72 by Niaz-Muhammad ibn Ashur-Muhammad Khoqani under the orders of Muhammad Khudayar Khan (r. 1845–1875). [1]

  4. File:Coin of Ahmad Shah Durrani, minted in Shahjahanabad ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Coin_of_Ahmad_Shah...

    English: Durranis. Ahmad Shah. AH 1160-1186 / AD 1747-1772. AV Mohur (22mm, 10.84 g, 2h). Dar al-Khalifat Shahjahanabad (Delhi) mint. Dated AH [117]4; RY 14 (AD 1760/1). Persian couplet citing Ahmad Shah in six lines; AH date to left, partially off flan / Mint and RY formula in six lines. Album 3090; Friedberg 1; KM 766. EF.

  5. Tarikh-i-Sher Shahi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarikh-i-Sher_Shahi

    The writer of the book provides a clear picture of Sher Shah taking over Bengal and how Bengal lost its independence. Ghiyasuddin Mahmud Shah was the sultan of Bengal from 1533 to 1538. Shah succeeded his father and brother and became the sultan of Bengal. He inherited an enormous kingdom and a well-decorated administration.

  6. Shaybanids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaybanids

    The Timurid ruler Shah Rukh developed the unit of currency, the tanka-i shahrukhi, in the early fifteenth century. [10] This served as the basis for the silver coins used by the Shaybänids. [ 10 ] The broad, thin variant of Shaybänid silver coins, which were popular throughout central Asia, Persia, and north-west India in the sixteenth ...

  7. Albanian lek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_lek

    Alexander the Great on the first Albanian 1 Lek coin. The lek was introduced as the first Albanian currency in February 1926. [2] Before then, Albania was a country without a currency, adhering to a gold standard for the fixation of commercial values. Before the First World War, the Ottoman Turkish piastre was in full circulation

  8. Wikipedia:COinS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:COinS

    This allows, for instance, searching for a copy of a book in one's own library. COinS have been added to various parts of Wikipedia. They are basically just a chunk of bibliographic information stored in a way that machines can read. This has two applications: The information can be converted into a full OpenURL and resolved by a local OpenURL ...

  9. File:Coins of the Shahs of Persia - Poole (1887).pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Coins_of_the_Shahs_of...

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