East India Co. 1841 2 Anna
East India Co. 1841 2 Anna
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Step into the dawn of Queen Victoria's Indian coinage with the 1841 East India Company 2 Anna, the first year of the new Victorian silver denomination introduced to standardise everyday small-change currency across the subcontinent. Issued under the East India Company's administration in the early years of Victoria's reign, this coin marks an important transitional moment in colonial Indian monetary history.
Struck in silver and weighing approximately 1.46 grams, the 2 Anna features the young bareheaded portrait of Queen Victoria on the obverse, accompanied by the inscription identifying the Company's authority. The reverse carries the denomination within an ornamental wreath, with the value rendered in both English and Persian script — a bilingual approach that became a hallmark of EIC coinage in the Victorian era, reflecting the linguistic plurality of mid-nineteenth-century India.
Coins like this travelled through the trading hubs, markets, and ports of mid-nineteenth-century India, threading together the everyday economic life of a subcontinent under Company rule. As an inaugural issue of its kind, the 1841 2 Anna holds particular significance for collectors of early Victorian colonial coinage.
Set into hand-carved oak wood, the 1841 EIC 2 Anna becomes the centrepiece of a luxurious Anka timepiece. The wood's natural grain complements the coin's aged silver patina, transforming a piece of early colonial commerce into a refined, wearable record of Company-era India.
USP : An inaugural Victorian-era EIC 2 Anna, reimagined as a wearable artifact of early British Indian rule.
The Legacy Behind Every Timepiece
Wearable Heritage
Carry the weight of eras—history reimagined for the modern wrist.
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Genuine ancient currency preserved as a unique, functional centerpiece.
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