Unfortunately, all the signs are that these are modern fantasy pieces. The writing, while vaguely similar to Arabic, does not match any real alphabet seen on coins. As described in the cited previous thread, the weight does not correspond to solid gold, so they may be gold plated, which would not correspond to a genuine coin. The British Bengal Presidency is not reported to have made a coin like this (for example, it's not listed in the Krause books). For comparison, here are some mohurs and fractional mohurs from the Bengal Presidency, Murshidabad mint.
One man from siuri area of birbhum district of sold me 678 pcs in 8 lacs.
I am trapped on froud
Plz. Help me
Give suggestion
I know only that person mobile number.
Hello,
First of all, you bought a coin which you do not have much information about it. Not only one coin but 678 same coins which you spent 8 Lakhs (Close to 9000 USD or 7600 Euro) from a person, and you only have his mobile number. Very strange.
With 3+ gram weight and a mohur, close match in numista catalogue is (¼ Mohur - Shah Alam II - Bengal Presidency – Numista). If its pure gold, current just metal value will be around 3gm*678 = 2034gm worth 2,80,87,506 Indian rupees (USD 313,387.87 or €266,419.04). and he was selling it to you just for 8 Lakhs (Close to 9000 USD or 7600 Euro)
Whoever buy such expensive deal might have strong numismatic background (I am not) or should have done some research.
Look at nearby bullion value as per near match for 1 coin
and you joined here only today
I am not an expert or a collector of highly priced coins, I just replied what came in my mind, Let's see what others may comments
Regards,
Pramod
“Arise, awake, stop not until your goal is achieved.”