Denomination: | One rupee coin |
Country: | India |
Value: | 1 |
Mass G: | 3.09 |
Diameter Mm: | 20 |
Diameter Inch: | 0.79 |
Composition: | Stainless steel |
Years Of Minting: | –present |
Mint Marks: | ⧫ = Mumbai B = Mumbai Proof issue * = Hyderabad ° = Noida No mint-mark = Kolkata |
Catalogue Number: | --> |
Obverse: | 1-rupees-2011-rev.png |
Obverse Designer: | RBI |
Obverse Design Date: | 2011 |
Reverse Designer: | RBI |
Reverse Design Date: | 2011 |
The Indian 1-rupee coin (₹1) is an Indian coin worth one Indian rupee and is made up of a hundred paisas. Currently, one rupee coin is the smallest Indian coin in circulation. Since 1992, one Indian rupee coins are minted from stainless steel. Round in shape, the one rupee coins weighs 3.76g, has a diameter of 21.93mm and thickness of 1.45mm. In independent India, one rupee coins was first minted in 1950 and is currently in circulation.
Sher Shah Suri, the founder of the Sur Empire ruled North India from 1540 to 1545 AD.[1] During his reign, Suri issued pure silver coins in 1542 and named it Rupiya (from Sanskrit रौप्य, raupya, meaning silver). The denomination remained in usage through the Mughal, Maratha, East India company and British rules.[2] [3] The rupiya was retained by the East India company till 1835 and formed the basis of the British Raj currency till 1947.[4] Each rupiya coin weighed 178gr. The sub-unit of rupyia were copper pieces and 40 copper pieces constituted as one rupiya. Sher Shah Suri named the copper pieces as Paisa.[2] [4] [5]
Each minted their own coinage, with Danish India using Fano;[6] French India: Roupie and fanon till 1954; Portuguese India rupia till 1958, ...
In 1717 AD, the East India Company obtained permission from the Mughal emperor Farrukhsiyar to coin Mughal style currency, at their Bombay factory. In 1835 AD, the Coinage Act of 1835 for uniform coinage came into force.[2] [7] Composed of 91.7% silver, the new one rupee coins weighed 11.66g and had a diameter of 30.55mm. The reverse of all one rupee coins minted after 1835 and before 1862 AD bore "East India Company" instead of the Mughal Empire.[8] The one rupee coins had bust of King William IIII (IV minted as IIII) and were first minted in 1835 AD.[9] Rupee coins issued after 1840 bore the busts of Queen Victoria (1840 to 1901 AD).[2] [10] [11]
The East India Company wanted to introduce the Pound sterling in India, due to the popularity of the Rupiya, the Pound sterling could not be introduced in India.
The Madras Presidency issued one rupee coins until 1815 AD. One rupee was equal to twelve fanams.[5]
The British Raj started in India in 1858 AD and lasted until Indian independence in 1947.[12] In 1862, new one rupee coins were issued, were known as the Regal issue, bore the bust of Queen Victoria on the obverse and "India" minted on the reverse side.[8] From 1862 to 1939 AD, one rupee coins were minted from 91.7% silver, weighed 11.66g, had a diameter of 30.78mm and thickness of 1.9mm. The obverse side of the coins featured the busts of Queen Victoria (1862 to 1901 AD), Edward VII (1903 to 1910 AD), George V (1911 to 1936 AD) and George VI (1938 to 1947 AD). Edward VIII was never featured on any one rupee coin since his reign (Jan-Dec 1936 AD) was short.[2] [10]
Due to World War I and II, there was a shortage of silver. As a result of the shortage, 0.917 silver one rupee coins were replaced by Quaternary silver alloy (0.500) in 1940. In 1947, the silver one rupee coin was replaced by nickel coins.[2]
Several Princely States issued their own currency, on the demise of the Mughal empire, with Hyderabad state issuing its own Hyderabadi rupee, between 1918 and 1959. As did: Alwar, Ambliara, Awadh, Bahawalpur, Bharatpur, Bikanir, Bund, Chuda, Dhar, Indergadh, Jaisalmer, Jaora, Junagadh, Kalat, Kutch, Mangrol, Mengani, Muli, Mysore, Nawanagar, Palitana, Rajkot, Ramgarh, Sailana, Sayala and several others.[13] [14] [15]
One Rupee coins (1835 to 1947): East India Company and British Raj | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Technical parameters | Description | Year of minting | Known mintage | Comments | |||||||
Obverse | Reverse | Weight | Diameter | Thickness | Metal | Edge | Obverse | Reverse | First | Last | ||
11.66 g | 30.5 mm | 1.9 mm | Silver (0.917) | Reeded | Bust of King William IIII with his name. | Face value, country and date surrounded by wreath. | 1835 | 1840 | 69,472,000 [16] | |||
11.66 g | 30.78 mm | 1.9 mm | Bust of Queen Victoria surrounded by her name. | Face value, country and date surrounded by wreath. | 1840 | 1901 | 2,454,825,107 | |||||
11.66 g | 30.6 mm | 1.9 mm | Bust of Edward VII surrounded by his name. | Face value, country and date surrounded by wreath. | 1903 | 1910 | 849,622,000 [17] | |||||
11.66 g | 30.5 mm | 1.9 mm | Bust of George V surrounded by his name. | Face value, country and date surrounded by wreath. | 1911 | 1936 | 1,807,479,000 [18] | Coins minted in 1911 had nick name "pig rupee". | ||||
11.66 g | 30.5 mm | 1.9 mm | Bust of George VI surrounded by his name. | Face value, country and date surrounded by wreath. | 1938 | 1939 | 772,980,000 [19] | |||||
11.66 g | 30.5 mm | 1.9 mm | Silver (0.500) | Security | 1939 | 1945 | ||||||
11.8 g | 28 mm | 2.48 mm | 1947 | 1947 | 160,039,000 [20] | Only minted in 1947. | ||||||
On 15 August 1947, India obtained independence and the monetary system and coinage of the British Raj were retained. It was not until 15 August 1950 that India introduced new coins. Introduction of new coins (including one rupee coin) was done in following chronology and reasons;[12] [21]
From 1947 to 1957, the Indian rupee was not decimalised and was divided into 16 annas. Each anna was further divided to four Indian pices (from 1835 to 1947, each pice was divided into three Indian pies; till the pie was demonetized in 1947). Table below shows sub-units of one rupee (1835–present).[3]
Denomination | Sub-unit | Sub-unit | From | To | Comments | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anna (1 Rupee=16 Anna) | Pice (1 Anna = 4 Pice) | Pie (1 Pice = 3 Pie) | 1835 | 1947 | Pie demonetized in 1947. | ||
- | 1947 | 1950 | The Frozen Series | ||||
1950 | 1957 | The Anna Series | |||||
Paisa (1 Rupee = 100 Paisa) | - | - | 1957 | 1964 | Naya Paisa Series. Anna & Pice demonetized in 1957. | ||
1964 | Present | Except 50 paisa, all lower coins demonetized. | |||||
(1835–1947): 1 Indian rupee = 16 anna = 64 pice = 192 pie. (1947–1957): 1 Indian rupee = 16 anna = 64 pice. (1957–1964): 1 Indian rupee = 100 naye paise. (1964–present): 1 Indian rupee = 100 paise. |
As of 2020, one rupee coins are minted by the India Government Mints in Mumbai, Kolkata, Hyderabad and in Noida. All coins are circulated only through the Reserve Bank of India.[22]
The following mint marks have been used on one rupee coins since 1947.[23] [24] [25]
Mint | Mark | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
☆ | Five-pointed star | ||
No mint-mark | Since this was the first Indian mint, coins minted in Kolkata don't carry a mark. | ||
⧫ | Diamond | ||
• | Small dot (solid) | ||
B | Letter B below year | ||
M | Letter M below year | On coins minted after 1996. | |
° | Small dot (hollow) | ||
H | Letter H below year | One rupee coins (KM# 79.1) in 1985 were also minted in Birmingham mint, United Kingdom. | |
mk | Letters "mk" in circle | One rupee coins (KM# 92.2) from 1998 to 2001 were also minted in the Kremnica mint, Slovakia. | |
Mo | °M, letter "M" beneath circle | One rupee coins (KM# 92.2) in 1997 were also minted in the Mexican Mint. | |
M | Letter "M" in oval | One rupee coins (KM# 92.2) from 1998 to 2000 were also minted in the Pretoria mint, South Africa. | |
• | Small dot | One rupee coins (KM# 79.1) in 1985 were also minted in Royal Mint in Llantrisant, United Kingdom. | |