When Sushilkumar Agrawal wanted to veer the attention of children, typically engrossed in mobile game applications and social networks, towards what he considers more fruitful hobbies such as collecting coins and stamps, he decided to crash their favourite venue: the internet.
Launched a month ago, Mintageworld.com is an online museum that hopes to be a "collectorspedia", or an information resource for young collectors of coins, paper notes, and stamps. Indeed, such artifacts do reveal information about the governments, economic atmosphere and other details of the periods to which they belong. Unlike physical museums, mintageworld.com has no collection of its own but seeks information from collectors. At Ultra Group's office in Lower Parel, a team of 35 has been collating big amounts of research, which it says was hitherto scattered. While experts will still rely on academic literature and libraries, the online museum could help novices, says veteran collector Kishore Jhunjhunwala.
Agrawal says the museum has had 10,000 registrations so far. Its database currently includes 22,000 coins, 1,200 currency notes, and 3,500 stamps. Most of these are from the Indian subcontinent but it will expand to include various geographies later. The coin category is broken down into ancient, medieval, colonial and modern India. Clicking on a particular coin gives you information about its denomination, year of issue, ruling dynasty, and minting technique. The paper money category spans British India, princely states and the Indian republic. The stamps include lists of official and commemorative ones.
A 2nd century gold dinar of Kushan emperor Huvishka. The reverse of this coin represents Skanda Kumar and Vishakha together
What led Ultra Group, an entertainment company managed by Agrawal, which mainly deals in film merchandise and distribution, to step into this new space? Its founder says this is a pet venture meant as a service. He remembers struggling to find information or specialised accessories like albums or envelopes when he collected stamps and copper coins growing up.
This note was printed in 1918 during World War I. The number 11111 is unique
Kaizad Todywalla, whose coin auction house has been in business for decades, vouches for the intrinsic value in this hobby. An 8-gram gold mohur minted by Jehangir fetched Rs 1.8 crore recently, he points out. At present, mintageworld.com does not carry information about the values of listed artifacts. Prices tend to change frequently, says Agrawal, but he plans to add a mention of selling prices as quoted in recent auctions.
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