East India Co. 1835 1/12 Anna
East India Co. 1835 1/12 Anna
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Step into the inaugural era of British India's uniform coinage with the 1835 East India Company 1/12 Anna coin, struck under King William IV in the very year that introduced a single, standardised currency across the subcontinent. The 1835 uniform coinage reform replaced the patchwork of regional Company mint outputs with a single integrated system — a quiet but pivotal moment in Indian monetary history.
Struck in copper and measuring approximately 17 mm in diameter, the coin features the dignified portrait of William IV on the obverse, accompanied by the inscription identifying the East India Company's authority. The reverse displays the denomination within a clean classical design — an early example of the standardised aesthetic that would shape British Indian coinage for the next two decades.
The 1/12 Anna sat at the foundation of the new system, used widely for the smallest market exchanges and routine daily transactions across the Company's territories. Its issue under William IV — who would reign for just two more years before his death in 1837 — gives it particular significance as part of an inaugural standardised coinage that bridged the late Georgian era into the early Victorian.
Set into hand-carved oak wood, the 1835 EIC 1/12 Anna becomes the centrepiece of a luxurious Anka timepiece. The wood's natural grain complements the coin's aged copper patina, transforming a piece of inaugural-era colonial commerce into a refined, wearable record of early British Indian rule.
USP : An inaugural EIC 1/12 Anna under William IV, preserved as a wearable artifact of British India's first uniform coinage system.
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