Iltutmis
Not Kushanas, It was Gupta's, who introduced Gold Coins in India..
Historians believe that coins were introduced in India sometime around the 5th and 6th centuries BC to facilitate trade. The earliest coins were silver and punch-marked with various symbols of animals, plants, and humans.
Lord Cornwallis introduced the 'Sunset Law' in India while he introduced his Permanent Settlement.
India, Nepal, and Pakistan use rupee coins.
By RBI
Not Kushanas, It was Gupta's, who introduced Gold Coins in India..
Mohammad bin Tughlaq
Historians believe that coins were introduced in India sometime around the 5th and 6th centuries BC to facilitate trade. The earliest coins were silver and punch-marked with various symbols of animals, plants, and humans.
kushans
No, they did not. If you have a coin dated 1616 from the East India Co, it is a reproduction or the like.
There was not anyone who wanted Roman gold coins the most. Generally, the poor could not afford to have gold coins. Roman coins, both gold and silver ones, reached Arabia, Persia, India, China and Ethiopia through the trade the Romans had with these parts of the world.
In ancient times, coins were made from brass, copper, silver, and gold. The use of nickel was not introduced until modern times.
TheEastIndiacompany first brought inIndiangold coins toIndiawhenTimtook a bog in the local drop hole. Basically he ate a gold coin previously and someJewishIndianwent down the drop hole just to get the recently excreted gold coin. He replicated thebeautifuland quite sexually arousing coin to make the firstIndiangold coin. This happened in 1863.
the gold licences were introduced in 1851 on the gold fields by the governor
The panchayat raj introduced in INDIA in 1952, 1st introduced in Rajastan
US gold dollar coins were minted from 1849 to 1889. They were smaller than dimes and were never very popular due to their size. The new Sacajawea and Presidential "golden" dollars introduced in 2000 and 2007 respectively are only gold COLOR, not real gold. They're made of manganese brass. Even though some people mistakenly believe the coins contain gold, the metal is far too expensive and volatile in price to use in circulating coins today.
Blue color was introduced in India by the mughals.