Description: Obverse: Bearded bust of Sasanian type king facing right, wearing crown. Four moon and star motifs in border outside double ring, with the one in exergue flanked by two groups of three dots. Obverse legend: Middle Persian inscription in Pahlavi script, including governor's name, in field; "In the name of Allah" ("bism allah") in Arabic in border outside rings. Reverse: Fire altar flanked by two attendants. Four moon and star motifs in border outside triple ring, the top with a symbol (inscription?) to the right. Reverse legend: Middle Persian in Pahlavi script in left field; mint mark in Arabic in right field.
Label Text: Installed in Art Before 700 CE, Spring 2025 Label Text:
Sasanian Coinage
The coinage of the Sasanian Empire set the standard for Western Asia and the Mediterranean world from the 3rd to the 7th centuries CE. Sasanian silver coins were renowned for their consistently high silver content, especially compared to Roman coinage circulating at the same time. For example, a drachm of Sasanian ruler Ardashir I was composed of about 91% silver, while a contemporary Roman denarius had just 45% silver.
Imitating Sasanian Silver
The consistently high purity of Sasanian silver made it extremely trustworthy and it was used widely around the Mediterranean and Asia. Other rulers of kingdoms across Central and South Asia imitated the imagery of Sasanian coins (a portrait of the ruler on obverse, a Zoroastrian fire altar on reverse) to try to project some of that trustworthiness. The early rulers of the Islamic Umayyad Caliphate did as well, using the legacy of Sasanian numismatic legitimacy to stake their own claim to political authority in the region. [Displayed with 1999.15.249, 2004.13.207, 2004.13.509, 2012.7, 2012.11.1, 2012.11.2, 2012.11.3, 2012.11.5, 2012.20.4, 2012.20.19, 2012.20.30, 2012.20.32, 2012.20.34, 2012.20.36, 2012.20.37, 2012.35, 2012.39.1, 2012.39.2, 2013.23]
Tags: ancient; archaeology; numismatics Subjects: Civilization, Ancient; archaeological objects; Numismatics Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=MH+2012.11.4 |