Gulf News

India’s history told through coins

DUBAI RESIDENT EXPLAINS HIS FASCINATIO­N WITH COINS AND HOW HE, THEN A SHY BOY, BEGAN COLLECTING THEM

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or Dubai resident Mitresh Singh, collecting coins is more than just a hobby.

The independen­t consultant from India has collected around 2,000 coins representi­ng every time period, dynasty, and empire documented and alluded to in his country’s history from 600BC to the present date.

Describing his relationsh­ip with coins as an “emotional connection”, Singh, 51, said: “These coins tell you so much — they tell you about history, archaeolog­y, sculptures, anthropolo­gy, sociology, religion, and even down to details like what people were wearing back then, their religious beliefs, and the prevalent weapons of war used in those times.”

Singh’s fascinatio­n with coins began at the age of seven. “I saw a foreign looking couple while on holiday in the summer capital of Shimla. I hid behind my mother and requested her to ask them for a coin from their home country, but she told me I had a better chance if I approached them myself,” Singh said.

Tapping a stranger’s knee and asking for a coin, young Singh was delighted when he was handed a gold-coloured nickel-brass three penny coin that was heavier and shinier than the aluminium coins he was used to buying groceries with for his mother.

That coin, which he has managed to treasure, was the trigger for a new passion. It was only after that day he found himself attracted to not only the varieties, shapes, patterns and textures of coins, but also the stories behind them. Having toyed with the idea of collecting a few coins throughout his teenage years, Singh’s focus on Indian coins began in his schools years, with a serious interest to start a collection in his late 30s.

Singh recalled the days he visited the old palaces and forts in Delhi, and would come across street vendors standing behind a piece of cloth carrying a pile of old coins.

“Something always made me stop when I saw coins. I would often start developing a story in my mind, and ask questions like who used this money? What was the family like? What could they have bought with it?” he said.

Favourite coins

Singh is the owner of a large collection of coins, which includes several series that range back from the ancient “Janapadas” (kingdoms) in 600BC and the Mauryan Empire in 300BC, to the coins used by the Greeks following Alexander the Great’s invasion of India in 326BC.

“I would say my three favourite series would be the Punch Mark Coins (PMC), where a technique of punching individual symbols such as the sun, moon, flora, fauna, and others is used on the coins, the gold coins used by the Gupta empire, and the gold coins used by the Mughal empire,” said Singh.

Throughout his 10 years in the UAE, Singh has managed to collect coins through internatio­nal and national public auctions, as well as online live auctions, and social media channels. “I wasn’t this connected to all parts and states of my country before starting my collection. I have now learnt much about my country and I will continue collecting (them) for as long as I can,” said Singh.

 ?? Pictures: Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News ?? Mitresh Singh with his collection of coins at his residence in Meadows, Dubai. He now has around 2,000 coins.
Pictures: Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News Mitresh Singh with his collection of coins at his residence in Meadows, Dubai. He now has around 2,000 coins.
 ??  ?? Silver square rupee issued by Jahangir, AH 1025
Silver square rupee issued by Jahangir, AH 1025
 ??  ?? Silver rupee issued by Shah Jahan, AH 1068
Silver rupee issued by Shah Jahan, AH 1068
 ??  ?? Gold dinar, Kushan empire, AD150-190
Gold dinar, Kushan empire, AD150-190
 ??  ?? Gold coins from Awadh, Wajid Ali Shah, 1847-56
Gold coins from Awadh, Wajid Ali Shah, 1847-56
 ??  ?? Gold pagoda, Madras Presidency, 1807-08
Gold pagoda, Madras Presidency, 1807-08
 ??  ?? Gold mohur, Queen Victoria, 1841
Gold mohur, Queen Victoria, 1841

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