1886-1906, India, Puddokkottai State. Copper Amman Cash Coin
Reference: KM-6.
Mint Period: 1886-1906.
Ruler: Martanda Bhairava
Denomination: Amman Cash
Weight: ca. 1.3gm
Material: Copper
Diameter: 12mm
Obverse: Brihadhambaal (Goddess of The Thondaimaan rulers of Pudukkottai) seated facing in posture.
Reverse: Telugu legend.
Legend: విజ య ("Victory!")
Pudukkottai was a kingdom and later a princely state in British India, which existed from 1680 until 1948.
The Kingdom of Pudukkottai was founded in about 1680 as a feudatory of Ramnad and grew with subsequent additions from Tanjore, Sivaganga and Ramnad. One of the staunch allies of the British East India Company in the Carnatic, Anglo-Mysore and Polygar wars, the kingdom was brought under the Company’s protection in 1800 as per the system of Subsidiary Alliance. The state was placed under the control of the Madras Presidency from 1800 until 1 October 1923, when the Madras States Agency was abolished, and until 1948 it was under the political control of the Government of India.
Pudukkottai State covered a total area of 1,178 square miles (3,050 km2) and had a population of 438,648 in 1941. It extended over the whole of the present-day Pudukkottai district of Tamil Nadu (with the exception of Aranthangi taluk which was then a part of Tanjore district). The town of Pudukkottai was its capital. The ruler of Pudukkottai was entitled to a 17-gun salute.