9781617975202
9781617975202
9781617975202
Jere L. Bacharach
Version 1
Dedicated to the Memory of
Samir Shamma
and
Contents vii
Tables and Maps
xii Illustrations
Preface
George C. Miles, one of the greatest scholars in the field of Islamic numismatics,
brought his illustrious career symbolically to a close with his monograph on the
coinage of the Arab rulers of Crete.1 While he continued to be active in the field,
Miles’ study of this relatively small group of coins allowed him to thank those with
whom he had worked over many decades as well as illustrate his abilities both as a
scholar of Islamic coinage and an interpreter of that data. In bringing my own
numismatic study of another relatively minor Muslim dynasty to a close, I seek to
meet the scholarly standards set by Miles as well as thank the many who have
enabled me to have such pleasure in being part of a community of scholars, cura-
tors, and collectors for many decades.
In 1971, I was introduced to the coinage of the Ikhshidid rulers who governed
Egypt, Palestine and, occasionally, other parts of Greater Syria between A.H. 323–
358/935–969 C.E., when Dr. Henri Amin Awad of Cairo placed before me a small
hoard of coins found in Fustat, Cairo, which we subsequently published.2 Later,
I had the opportunity to study and publish a larger hoard of Ikhshidid, Hamdanid,
Qarmati, and Fatimid coins held by the Israel Department of Archaeology and
Museums in the Rockefeller Museum, Jerusalem.3 By the end of the 1970s, I was
working in Cairo on a project sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution to pub-
lish a catalogue of the numismatic items in the Egyptian National Library (Dar al-
Kutub Khedieval Collection).4 The team leaders were Norman (Doug) Nicol,
who had just completed with me his excellent Ph.D. on Abbasid numismatics,
and Raafat el-Nabarawy, an advanced graduate student in Islamic numismatics at
Cairo University who went on to be Dean, College of Archaeology, Cairo
1. George C. Miles. The Coinage of the Arab Amirs of Crete (New York: ANS Numismatic Notes
and Monographs No. 160, 1970).
2. Jere L. Bacharach and Henri Amin Awad, ‘A Hoard of Ikhshidid Dirhams,” al-Abhath XXIV
(1974): 51–58.
3. Jere L. Bacharach, ‘Hoard of Muslim Dirhams from Tel Ashdod,” Atiqot XIV (1981): 83–92.
4. Norman D. Nicol, Raafat el-Nabarawy, and Jere L. Bacharach. Catalog of the Islamic Coins, Glass
Weights, Dies and Medals in the Egyptian National Library (Malibu, CA. American Research Center in
Egypt/Catalogues—Undena Publications, 1982).
University. By then I had prepared a draft of a small catalogue of Ikhshidid coins
whose numbering system was used as a reference for the Ikhshidid specimens in
the Dar al-Kutub Catalogue. I had also written a twenty-six page interpretative
essay on Ikhshidid coinage, which had benefited from constructive comments by
Helen Mitchell Brown of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. That catalogue and
introduction were never revised nor submitted for publication.
I returned to the Ikhshidid project in the late 1980s and again in the mid-1990s
publishing a few specialized articles on various aspects of Ikhshidid coinage.
I continued to comb numismatic literature for new data and visited additional collec-
tions to record their Ikhshidid coinage. The result was that the size of the original
catalogue more than tripled in terms of the number of specimens examined, although
the number of new varieties was relatively small. However, this project was not com-
pleted as I found other academic duties and activities to more than fill my time.
Thanks to the encouragement, occasional prodding, and support of my friend
and colleague Luke Treadwell, I returned to Oxford University for two months in
the fall of 2004 as the Samir Shamma Fellow in Islamic Numismatics and Epigra-
phy. This time I had only one primary task and the results of that period of writing,
subsequently revised, are before you. The text, from my point of view, is signifi-
cantly better and larger than the earlier 1970s version. I have incorporated into this
new study earlier published material as well as more recent ones. The corpus is also
significantly improved. I benefited from the input of Doug Nicol whose own term
as a Shamma Fellow overlapped with mine, and Steve Album, another Shamma Fel-
low, whose fall 2004 travel plans included Oxford. Again, looking back at almost
thirty-five years of contact with dealers, collectors, museum curators, and scholars,
I think how incredibly fortunate I have been. The pleasure of my many academic
interactions with colleagues including members of the Oriental Institute, Oxford
University, and other numismatists in the Heberden Coin Room, Ashmolean
Museum, is one consolation for me for taking so long to complete this project.
Edward Said’s Orientalism, at least indirectly, necessitates the first chapter of
this study.5 No other work in Middle Eastern Studies has shaken the assumptions
of the field as his book did and while it is already over a quarter of a century old,
its impact still continues.6 One simple, but clear message of Said’s work was that
scholarship is not a neutral or value-free enterprise. Most scholars have always
known this, but the influence of Said’s work on me led me into a more public
xiv Preface
declaration of my approach. For example, in the past I treated catalogues of coins
as value-free collections of data, the publication of which was often pejoratively
called Antiquarianism. I now recognize that subjective decisions go into the
arrangement of the material. Organizing numismatic data for a catalogue by listing
in order of priority dynasty, ruler, metal, mint, and date creates a different hier-
archy then listing the data by region, mint, date, and then metal with dynasty and
ruler last.7 The point is not that one ordering is right and the other wrong, but
that the decision to pick one reflects a subjective decision on the part of the
scholar. Thus, in the first chapter of this study I discuss my approach to organiz-
ing and interpreting numismatic data. For newcomers to the numismatic field,
I present an explanation of technical terms, such as obverse, reverse, die links, and
degree of fineness, which are used later in the analytical chapters. I also use this
first chapter to describe the standard type of dinars and dirhams circulating in the
central lands of the Abbasid Empire from 323/935, the year Muhammad ibn
Tughj took control of Egypt and Palestine.
The second chapter focuses on the coinage of Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikh-
shid, the founder of the Ikhshidid dynasty. I draw extensively in this and the third
chapter on articles I have published over the years taking advantage of the con-
structive input of colleagues who have caught errors or have suggested better
interpretations of the data. In particular a mea culpa must be noted concerning a
key argument, which I put in absolute terms and made in an article published in
1979 in the JAOS (Journal of the American Oriental Society).8 I presented a com-
plex interpretation of how the names of two new Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad in
A.H. 333 and A.H. 334 were mentioned in the khutba (Friday sermon) in Fustat,
Egypt, when news of their becoming caliph reached Egypt. I then added that al-
Ikhshid, as the Abbasid governor of Egypt, did not change the coinage (sikka) by
replacing the name of the previous caliph, which was inscribed on the dinars (gold
coins) and dirhams (silver coins) for that year, with the name of the new caliph.
7. R.C. Senior, a collector, scholar, and donor, argued that by rearranging his Indo-Scythian coins
according to style rather than identifying pieces as Bactrian, Indo-Greek, Indo-Scythian, and Kushan,
he had filled in the blanks in the series, which were created when the coins were arranged according to
a dynastic order. See his forthcoming publication: ‘The Pre-Kushan Period in Gandhara: Recent
Researches,” Indian Numismatics, Epigraphy and Archaeology: Recent Advances in Reconstructing the Past,
Shailendra Bhandare, ed. (forthcoming)—Presented orally, Oxford University, 16 September 2004.
A number of references will be made to unpublished material, which has been shared with me privately
or through public presentation. Those authors deserve full credit for their ideas or discovery of relevant
material and will be cited.
8. Jere L. Bacharach, ‘Al-Ikhshid, the Hamdanids and the Caliphate: The Numismatic Evidence,”
JAOS 94 (1974): 360–70.
Preface xv
I based my absolutist position on an examination of over a thousand Ikhshidid
coins and the absence of either of the new caliphs’ name on the coinage of Egypt
or Palestine for the specific year in which they became caliph. Then, one day long
after the article appeared I was at the home of a Middle Eastern collector where
I found a worn, but clearly inscribed Ikhshidid dirham with just the data
I predicted did not exist; it was a dirham minted in Egypt dated A.H. 334 with the
name of the al-Muti‘, the second Abbasid caliph for that Muslim year.
Arguing from the absence of evidence is always a dangerous approach and
I almost did it again. In an earlier draft I wrote that the Ikhshidids never minted
coins in Aleppo because I had never seen one. This time my absolutist position
did not go into print before I examined the Ashmolean collection, which included
an Ikhshidid dirham minted in Aleppo, probably in A.H. 336, in the name of the
second ruler of the Ikhshidid dynasty. If many of my conclusions are qualified
whenever numismatic data are lacking, it is because I realize that somewhere there
may be another Ikhshidid coin proving my absolutist position wrong.
The third chapter covers the coinage of al-Ikhshid’s successors and, again,
I draw upon my earlier published articles and recent research. Part of the intellec-
tual joy of working on this section was seeking explanations for the appearance of
the name of an Ikhshidid ruler in lands beyond their direct control. In both chap-
ters two and three most of the analysis focuses on coinage, which falls outside the
traditional dinars and dirhams. This material includes a few copper pieces and a
broad category of numismatic specimens, which numismatists label presentation or
commemorative pieces including one medallion. Little is written about copper
coins because they were almost non-existent in this period.9 Presentation pieces are
fascinating because they offer data not found on regular gold and silver coinage.
While they eventually circulated in the market as struck metal along with the regu-
lar dinars and dirhams, they differed from the regular coinage in terms of size,
inscriptions, and, in one case, the inclusion of human images. The last chapter will
offer a number of generalizations about fourth-century A.H./tenth-century C.E. Ikh-
shidid history and understood societal rules based upon these numismatic sources.
The second half of this publication is a catalogue. It begins with a listing of all
the regular gold coins organized by ruler, then mint and date followed by the regular
silver coins by ruler, mint, and date. In creating this format, my priority was to serve
the needs of dealers, collectors, and curators so that it would be relatively easy for
them to compare any piece they had with my data. It is also for this reason that
9. Stephen Album, ‘No small change: The disappearance of copper coinage in the Islamic world
during the ninth century.” Oral presentation and paper 19 April 1995.
xvi Preface
I listed all regular dinars and dirhams separately rather than combining them by ruler
as is done in other catalogues. The third part of the catalogue consists of fulus (cop-
per coins), Meccan coinage associated with the Ikhshidids, and presentation pieces.
In creating the catalogue, it became an essential tool for my research. I used it
to identify when and where change occurred in the regular coinage, which could
involve the addition of new names, new tutelary, additional pious phrases, and iso-
lated letters or different layouts; to trace the relative output of the mints over
time; to observe any changes in weight standards by time or region; to isolate
coins struck in the name of the Ikhshidids minted outside lands they directly con-
trolled; and to separate presentation pieces from regular issues. Different methods
were needed to establish the degree of fineness/percentage of purity for gold and
silver issues, which are discussed in the following chapter.
Two mechanical issues involve dating and transliteration. When two dates
appear, I use the Hijra date (A.H.) first followed by the Common Era (C.E.) year.
When discussing the coinage, I only use the Hijra date, as that is the one inscribed
on the coin itself. The transliteration system follows the guidelines used by IJMES
(International Journal of Middle East Studies).
Dr. Paul Balog pioneered numismatic studies for many periods of pre-Ottoman
Islamic Egypt and his corpuses for Ayyubid and Mamluk coinage are still the basic
references in both fields.10 He is also the first scholar to compile a corpus of Ikhshidid
coins.11 For all who had the pleasure of knowing him, Balog was a wonderful, gener-
ous human being who was willing to share his knowledge and his collection. For me,
he is the founder of Ikhshidid numismatic studies and an essential supporter of all my
earlier work on Mamluk coinage. Therefore, I dedicate this book to his memory.
The second person to whose memory I dedicate this study is Mr. Samir Shamma.
As a scholar, he significantly expanded our knowledge of Ikhshidid specimens.12
Beyond his publications Shamma’s generosity and support of the study of Islamic
numismatics in America, Europe, and the Middle East put him in a class of his own.
Through arrangements with the Heberden Coin Room, the Ashmolean Museum, he
made his extensive collection available to scholars and through his support a ten-
10. Paul Balog, The Coinage of the Ayyubids (London: Royal Numismatic Society Special Publica-
tion Number 12, 1980). Balog. The Coinage of the Mamluk Sultans of Egypt and Syria (New York:
American Numismatic Society, Numismatic Studies, no. 12, 1964).
11. Paul Balog, ‘Table de references des monnaies ikhchidites,” Revue belge de Numismatique 103
(1957): 107–34. Paul Balog, ‘Dinars ikhchidites trouves a Assiout (Haute-Egypte) en automne 1954,”
Revue belge de Numismatique 101 (1955): 103–11.
12. Samir Shamma, ‘The Ikhshidid Coins of Filastin,” Al-Abhath 22 (Nos. 3 and 4) (1969): 27–46.
Samir Shamma, Al-Nuqud al-Islamiya allati duribat fi Filastin (West Bank, 1980).
Preface xvii
volume sylloge of the Islamic coins in the Ashmolean is being published.13 In order
to enable scholars such as myself, Stephen Album, Michael Bates, Lutz Ilisch, Alek-
sadr Naymark, Norman D. Nicol, and Gert Rispling to undertake research free from
our normal employment responsibilities, Shamma created the Samir Shamma Fel-
lowship in Islamic Numismatics and Epigraphy, which is housed in St. Cross College,
Oxford University and is attached to the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. I consider
holding the Shamma Fellowship one of the great honors of my academic career.
Many individuals over many years were very generous in sharing with me
their time and data and I wish to thank the following: Ibrahim Artuk (Turkey),
Henri Amin Awad (Egypt), Gabyulla Babyarov (Uzbekistan), Dennis Basic
(U.S.A.), Ariel Berman (Israel), Guilo Bernardi (Italy), Ramzi J. Bikhazi (Can-
ada), Roz Britton-Strong (U.K.), Helen Brown (U.K.), Raoul Curiel (France),
Gunther Dembski (Austria), Adnan M. Djaroueh (Syria), Andrew S. Ehrenkreutz
(Australia), Haim Gitler (Israel), Adon A. Gordus (U.S.A.), Robert Gurnet (Bel-
gium), Salim Haddad (Lebanon), Raymond Hebert (U.S.A.), Stefan Heidemann
(Germany), Muhammad al-Kholi (Syria), Muhammad Y. Limbada (U.K.),
13. So far the following volumes have been published: Stephen Album and Tony Goodwin, Sylloge
of Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean, Vol. 1: The Pre-Reform Coinage of the Early Islamic Period (Oxford:
Ashmolean Museum, 2002); Norman D. Nicol, Sylloge of Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean, Vol. 2: Early
post-reform coinage (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2009); Nicol, Sylloge of Islamic coins in the Ashmo-
lean, Vol. 3: Later Abbasid precious metal coinage (to 218 AH) (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2012),
Nicol, Sylloge of Islamic coins in the Ashmolean, Vol. 4: Later Abbasid precious metal coinage (from 219
AH) (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2012); Nicol, Sylloge of Islamic coins in the Ashmolean, Vol. 6: The
Egyptian dynasties (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2007); Album, Sylloge of Islamic Coins in the Ashmo-
lean, Vol. 9: Iran after the Mongol Invasions (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2001); Album, Sylloge of
Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean, Vol. 10: Arabia and East Africa (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 1999). It
is anticipated that three more volumes will appear. In addition to the Ashmolean series, a sylloge of the
Islamic coins in the T€ubingen University collection has begun. Lutz Ilisch, Sylloge Numorum Arabico-
rum T€ubingen: Palastina IVa Bilad as-Sam (T€ubingen: Forschungsstelle fur Islamische Numismatik
Orientalisches Seminar der Universit€at T€ubingen, 1993). L. Korn, Sylloge Numorum Arabicorum
T€ubingen: IVc: Hamah (T€ubingen: Forschungsstelle f€ur Islamische Numismatik Orientalisches Semi-
nar der Universit€at T€ubingen, 1998). Atif Mansur Ramadan & Florian Schwarz, Sylloge numorum Ara-
bicorum, T€ubingen XIVa 1, Naysabur, Sabzawar und die M€unzst€atten in G uwayn (Tubingen:
Forschungsstelle fur Islamische Numismatik Orientalisches Seminar der Universitat Tubingen, 2012).
Tobias Meyer, Sylloge Numorum Arabicorum T€ubingen: Nordund Ostzentialasien XVb Mittelasien II
(Berlin: Forschungsstelle f€ur Islamische Numismatik Orientalisches Seminar der Universit€at
T€ubingen, 1998). Florian Schwarz, Sylloge Numorum Arabicorum T€ubingen: XIVd Hurasan IV: Gaznal
Kabul (T€ubingen: Forschungsstelle f€ur Islamische Numismatik Orientalisches Seminar der Universit€at
T€ubingen, 1995). Florian Schwarz, Sylloge Numorum Arabicorum T€ubingen: XIVc Hurasan III: Balh
und Landschaften am oberen Oxus (T€ubingen: Forschungsstelle f€ur Islamische Numismatik Orienta-
lisches Seminar der Universit€at T€ubingen, 2001). Michael Fedorov, Sylloge numorum Arabicorum,
T€ubingen: Buhara / Samarqand : XVa Mittelasien. 1, Central Asia (Tubingen: Orientalisches Seminar
der Universit€at T€ubingen, 2009).
xviii Preface
George C. Miles (U.S.A.), Ulla S. Linder-Welin (Sweden), Nicholas Lowick
(U.K.), Siham al-Mahdi (Egypt), Kurt Munzel (Germany), Raafat al-Nabarawy
(Egypt), Arlette Negre (France), Bernard O’Kane (Egypt), W.A. Oddy (U.K.),
Venetia Porter (U.K.), Hassanein Rabie (Egypt), Shraga Qedar (Israel), Elizabeth
Savage (U.K.), Marcia Sharabany (Israel), Elena Stolyarik (U.S.A.), Muhammad
Abu’-l-Faraj al-Ush (Qatar), CM. (Tony) Webdale (U.K.), Muserref Yetim
(U.S.A.), and Sherif Anwar.
I was also able to study the relevant material from the following collections
and I thank all who were so generous in giving me that opportunity. The Ameri-
can Numismatic Society (New York), Ashmolean Museum (Oxford), Bibliothe-
que Nationale (Paris), British Museum (London), Museum of Islamic Art
(Cairo), Israel Museum (Jerusalem), Nasir D. Khalili Collection (London), L. A.
Mayer Museum (Jerusalem), National Library (Cairo), National Museum (Dam-
ascus), Islamic Archaeology Museum (Istanbul), Israel Department of Archaeol-
ogy and Museums (Jerusalem), Rockefeller Museum (Jerusalem), Samir Shamma
Collection (Oxford), Forschungsstelle f€ur Islamische Numismatik T€ubingen
(T€ubingen), and Yapi ve Kredi Bank Museum (Istanbul).
Special thanks are due to a few others: Steve Album has been a fountain of
information and advice, sharing his ideas freely and frequently; Michael Bates has
been exceedingly generous in making available to me his insightful, original,
extensively researched forthcoming study of the second monetary epoch of Abba-
sid coinage, which includes the first years the Ikhshidids governed Egypt and Pal-
estine; Irene Bierman has been an intellectual stimulus on a wide range of
subjects, which have directly affected how I interpret Islamic numismatic data;
Lutz Ilisch was always ready and willing to share his vast knowledge of Islamic
coinage and responded rapidly to all my electronic requests; Doug Nicol shared
the data from his forthcoming sylloge of the Egyptian coins in the Ashmolean and
Shamma collections, his forthcoming corpus of Fatimid coins, answered my
numerous emails quickly and in a constructive manner, and was a direct help in
many ways with the accompanying catalogue; and Luke Treadwell whose open-
ness to a broad range of issues has made my stays at Oxford some of the most
intellectually exciting times of my life.
Having named so many individuals in this preface I realize that some will be
called upon to review this work and I expect from each of them and others the
same openness and honesty, which they have shown me these many years. Errors
of fact and interpretation are my responsibility and I shall gain by having them
pointed out.
Preface xix
Funding for such a long-term project has come from a number of sources,
even when my primary academic activity involved other priorities and I wish to
thank the following: American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE); Council for
American Overseas Research Centers; Council for International Exchange of
Scholars (Fulbright Commission); Howard and Frances Keller Research Fund,
Department of History, University of Washington; National Endowment for the
Humanities, the Samir Shamma Fellowship in Islamic Numismatics and Epigra-
phy, Oxford University; and the Smithsonian Institution. Two institutions—The
American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE) and the American Numismatic Soci-
ety (ANS)—both gave me critical support. A generous publication subsidy was
granted by the ARCE Antiquities Endowment Fund, which in turn, is supported
by a grant from USAID. I wish to add my thanks to Gerry Scott, Director, ARCE
and Ute Wartenberg Kagan, Executive Director, ANS.
At the AUC Press I had the pleasure of working with Neil Hewison whose
patience while retaining a sense of humor is greater than anyone I know. I was
also supported at the AUC Press by Nadia Naqib. I was also fortunate to work
again with Rosalind Wade Haddon, an outstanding editor. Susan Benson who
typed the Arabic was very patient with all my last minute requests. I also received
valuable comments from a group of non-specialists, my colleagues in the Univer-
sity of Washington’s History Research Group.
In addition to those many named above, two women—Ruth Bacharach and
Barbara Fudge—over these many years have also played a key role for which
words of thanks do not capture my deep appreciation.
xx Preface
Preface to Second Edition
This second, updated edition of Islamic History through Coins includes over 350
additional specimens, which are listed in the catalogue section under their appro-
priate number, that is, an increase of over twenty-five percent from the original
database. New types and examples include another Misr 353 dinar, whose date is
probably an error for 355, which was not fully identified in the first edition; dir-
hams for Dimashq for 334, 342, and 343; Tabariyah for 336, 346, and 353; and a
dirham with the mint name Mecca and the date 334. The last is discussed in fuller
detail in chapter two. Whenever possible, better images of the coins were used in
this edition. To aid users of this electronic version, the data on the obverse and
reverse types of regular Ikhshidid dinars and dirhams have been placed at the end
of this book. I hope that through the input of reviewers and volunteer readers all
the errors from the first edition have been corrected, but if not, their continued
inclusion and any new ones are my responsibility.
Many individuals aided me in this second edition and I wish to thank the fol-
lowing: Sherif Anwar, Michael Bates, William Barrett, Vladimir Belyaev, Giulio
Bernardi, Robert Darley-Doran, Liz Darley-Doran, Seth Freeman, Elizabeth
Hahn, Stefan Heidemann, Mary Hinton, Lutz Ilisch, John C. Lavender, Stephen
Lloyd, Luke Treadwell, Vladimir Suchy, Ahmed Yousef, David Wasserstein, and
Shaikha Hussa al-Sabah. I am particularly grateful for this edition for the sharing
of data and, when requested, for images by Steve Album Rare Coins of California,
the American Numismatic Society, the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford), Baldwin’s
of London, Dar al-‘Athar al-Islamiya (Kuwait), Morton & Eden of London, and
the website www.zeno.ru. I also wish to express my appreciation to Neil Hewison
and the staff at AUC Press for their support in this project.
1. Whenever two dates are given separated by a slash, the first is the Muslim Hijra year and the sec-
ond is the Common Era, previously labeled as A.D. In chapters two and three most dates are only given
in Hijra years as that was the calendar used on Muslim coinage.
2. There are a number of good introductions to the history of numismatics. Among the best is Phi-
lip Grierson, Numismatics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1975). A more popular approach includ-
ing excellent color plates of coins is Jonathan Williams, ed. Money –A History (London: The British
Museum Press, 1997) in which Michael Bates contributes a chapter on Islamic coins. Another brief
summary of Islamic numismatics can by found in Venetia Porter, “Islamic coins – Origins and Devel-
opment,” Origin, Evolution and Circulation of Foreign Coins in the Indian Ocean, Osmund Bopearachchi
and D.P.M. Weerakkody, eds., (Manohar: Sri Lanka Society for Numismatic Studies and French Mis-
sion of Archeological Co-operation in Sri Lanka, 1998): 63–71. Another overview with a more theoret-
ical bent is Giles P. Hennequin, “Les monnaies et la monnaie,” Etats, societes et cultures du monde
musulman medieval, Jean Claude Garcin, ed. (Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 2000) II: 219–44.
the following order: production—issue/supply—circulation—deposition—sur-
vival—recovery—recording—publication/public domain.3 This chapter draws
upon his organizing principles by focusing primarily on production. Two questions
are raised: what is on the coinage and what is in the coinage? In answering the second
of these, a brief summary of how pre-machine made coins were struck is included.
One priority responsibility is for numismatists is to identify what is on the coin-
age. The historian using numismatic evidence asks why these specific elements—
words, designs, signs, and symbols—were chosen at that time and place. This leads
to using the coinage as an historical source to ask what we can learn about a specific
society at a particular time or the policies or priorities of the individual who author-
ized the coinage at the moment it was issued. A modern example will illustrate my
point. Both sides of the Great Seal of the United States are reproduced on the back
of the U.S. one dollar bill. The Great Seal includes English and Latin, an unfinished
pyramid, and other symbols meaningful to those men who created the Great Seal
at the end of the eighteenth century C.E. A numismatic historian can use this Seal to
reconstruct some of the intellectual and philosophical ideas current in that era.
Although the Great Seal is still used on twenty-first century American currency, it is
not a valid source for enhancing our understanding of this century.
Kennet’s last category, publication/public domain, involves the value of cata-
logues, private collections, and museum holdings for historical studies and is also
discussed in this chapter. Most of his other categories trace what happens to coins
after they have been minted and are not the subject of this book. The circulation of
numismatic evidence over time is a subfield of numismatics, which I have labeled
Monetary History. Here the emphasis shifts from the data on the individual piece
to the collective body of numismatic evidence. For example, economic historians
who study monetary history use coinage for analyzing a wide variety of issues such
as long term economic trends and the degree of monetization in a society.4
4 On Coinage
Two aspects of monetary history, however, are important for this study. The
first is the domination over time of a particular visual image so that the layout is
easily recognized by those who use the coinage. Using the previous example, the
appearance of the Great Seal of the United States long after its original meaning
was forgotten reflects the conservative nature of most numismatic material. The
numismatic study would identify when significant elements are introduced into a
coinage and why; the monetary history would focus on which of these elements is
retained over time so that the coinage is easily identifiable without having to read
the specific inscriptions or interpret the particular signs and symbols.
In the last section of this chapter I trace the general changes in Islamic coinage
from the late first/seventh century when the first all-epigraphic Muslim coins
were struck to the period of Ikhshidid rule in the fourth/tenth century. Emphasis
is placed on the layout of Abbasid coinage from the third/ninth century, which is
labeled the second Abbasid monetary epoch. A corollary is the concept of mone-
tary zones. This refers to the idea that there are geographic areas where a particu-
lar coinage is recognized and accepted without being ‘read.’ An early twenty-first
century example of a coinage and its accompanying monetary zone would be the
Euro, which circulates freely in Europe but is considered ‘foreign’ and not easily
accepted in other parts of the world such as the United States.
Economic exchanges including international trade far more complex than a
simple barter system had been going on for thousands of years before the invention
of coinage. Pharaonic Egypt offers the most obvious example. Long after coinage
was introduced into the Western and Middle Eastern worlds, large parts of the
globe continued to calculate exchanges by other means such as weighed quantities
of unstamped metal, cloth, and cowry shells, but coinage spread because it had a
number of advantages.5 It was small enough for easy counting, weighing, and carry-
ing; it was not easily destructible; it had a marking on it implying that some author-
ity was guaranteeing its relative quality; and it was a vehicle by which the
authorizing authority was making a statement about itself. When studying coinage
I ask two basic questions: what’s on it and what’s in it? Both questions, in turn, rest
on a number of assumptions, which need to be articulated.
textual information on prices. David Kessler and Peter Temin, “Money and Prices in the Early Roman
Empire,” Paper presented at the Conference on Money and Monetization in the early Roman Empire,
Columbia University, 7–8 April, 2005.
5. The numismatic term for the cut and broken pieces of silver ingots and jewelry is Hacksilber,
which eventually succumbed to Aegean monetary practices. Peter van Alfen, “Uncoined Money in the
Ancient World,” American Numismatic Society Magazine 2.1 (2003): 16–17.
On Coinage 5
What is on it?
A strong case has been made that one reason for the issuance of coinage was that
it was a vehicle for enhancing the image of a Greek polis or kingdom. It was a
form of propaganda and the markings on the coinage had meaning to the issuing
authorities and they wished to be associated with that sign or symbol.6 With a
broad range of research tools available, including occasional textual references,
discoveries of coin hoards within specific locales and, most helpful of all, wording
on the coinage itself identifying the minting city, scholars have been able to attrib-
ute almost all Classical coinage to a specific Greek polis, a particular Roman ruler,
etc. What is not obvious is why one overall design, sign, symbol, or even a letter
was used on a particular coinage rather than another. One challenge for numis-
matic scholarship is to answer the ‘why’ in the preceding sentence.
Someone or ones made the original suggestions for a coin’s overall design, lay-
out, pattern, script, image, or wording. My first assumption is that the highest politi-
cal authority, even if that person didn’t have direct control over the mint, was
ultimately responsible. I will use some modern examples to illustrate my point. Thus,
a specific British Prime Minister can be held responsible for authorizing the portrait
of Elizabeth Fry (1780–1845) on the Bank of England five-pound note and a spe-
cific American president is the final authority for the order that United States (U.S.)
$100 bills be printed with a picture of Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790). This doesn’t
mean that these political leaders made the actual decision, only that once a choice
was made, that individual as the highest political authority could be held responsible.
If there had been a public outcry in Britain over the appearance of this particular
female as opposed to a more famous figure such as Florence Nightingale or in the
U.S. over the inclusion of someone other than a U.S. President on the circulating
currency, it was not an unnamed bureaucrat who was going to take the heat for it.
Applying this approach to the fourth/tenth century central Islamic lands of
the Middle East, it is my position that either an Abbasid caliph or a local governor
who had effective control over the mint was responsible for the legends inscribed
on the dinars (gold coins) and dirhams (silver coins). The same person was also
ultimately responsible for the purity or degree of fineness of the gold and silver
coins. Fals (a copper coin; plural = fulus) are not included in this study for two
6. Thomas R. Martin, “Why did the Greek Polis originally need coins?,” Historia Zeitschrift f€ur alte
Geschichte 45, no. 3 (1996): 257–83. Peter Vargyas, “Money in the Ancient Near East Before and After
Coinage, “Albright News 5 (February 2000): 10–11. It is possible that there was no symbolic ‘meaning’
in the design of the first dies when coinage was invented, but once struck that meaningless’ mark
became associated with the issuing authority and acquired ‘meaning.’
6 On Coinage
reasons: first, they were not subject to the same degree of centralized control cre-
ating the opportunity for far greater variety by local authorities than is found on
regular gold and silver specimens and second, Muslim law in the form of the sha-
ri’a was applied only to dinars and dirhams.7
The power to determine what was on the coinage in the Islamic world is sum-
marized by the phrase ‘right of sikka.’ There are two ways in which the Arabic term
can be understood: the first is the right to strike any coinage in any metal as long as
the authorizing power was responsible for what appeared on and in the coinage and
the quality of metal in it; the second refers only to the right to determine what was
on and in regular dinars and dirhams. In the latter case, sikka only refers to shari’a rec-
ognized coinage. This study will use the term sikka in this second sense and will focus
on the ways in which the Ikhshidid rulers did and did not impinge on what was con-
sidered a caliphal prerogative. Therefore, throughout this study a distinction will be
maintained between regular dinars and dirhams and all other numismatic pieces even
if they were struck in gold and silver. As Album wrote on the right of sikka for this
particular Abbasid era, “in order to give their self-proclaimed sovereignty the cloak of
legitimacy, these (local) rulers at first applied to the caliph for his formal recognition
of their de facto authority, and usually sent lavish gifts and exuberant promises of trib-
ute. Under such circumstances, the caliph could scarcely refuse recognition.”8
Returning to my modern example, it may be possible to research Parliamentary
Papers, Congressional Records, archives of the British and American mints, contem-
porary newspapers or even specialized contemporary numismatic newsletters to dis-
cover why a relatively unknown early nineteenth century British female (Elizabeth
Fry) or a non-Presidential eighteenth century U.S. figure (Benjamin Franklin)
appeared on their respective currencies.9 However, for most of the history of coinage
such data do not exist. The challenge for the numismatic historian is to offer an
explanation of what appears on the coinage recognizing that most interpretations will
be based on very limited evidence and subject to further revision and correction.
In modern cases it may be possible to discover the original motivation for the
inclusion of specific elements on a coinage. One example is the appearance of the
famous American female suffragist Susan B. Anthony on the U.S. dollar coin.
7. G. C. Miles, “Dinar,” EI, 2nd ed., II: 297; Miles, “Dirham,” EI, 2nd ed., II: 319. A.L. Udovitch,
“Fals, “EI, 2nd ed., II: 768. Stuart D. Sears, “Money,” Encyclopedia of the Qur’an (Leiden: E.J. Brill,
2004) III: 408–409.
8. Stephen Album. Marden’s Numismatica Orientalia Illustrata (New York: Attic Books, 1977): 13.
9. I was surprised to discover that John Gurney, Oxford’s specialist on Persian literature, knew a
great deal about Elizabeth Fry’s remarkable career. Gurney did conclude the conversation by sharing
that he was also related to her.
On Coinage 7
Many Americans recognize her name and her association with the women’s vot-
ing rights movement. Research in archives, contemporary news media, and coin
trade journals of the time permit historians to reconstruct the specific factors dur-
ing the Carter Administration which lead to the decision to include her portrait
on the coinage. For most of human history such sources are not available and
memory of why a particular coin type was chosen and what it represented at the
time it was first issued is quickly lost.
Most coinages successful in the market retain their basic layout and design
over time so that the issues are easily recognized as having been minted by a spe-
cific authority in a particular area. Standard types such as the second Abbasid
monetary epoch style, to be discussed in detail below, are developed by authoriz-
ing authorities, which then retain the general pattern of these issues over time.
This is particularly true if the pattern is widely recognized in the market and is
known for its quality. The conservative nature of this coinage can be labeled ‘rep-
utation,’ where there is a value-added component to the money because ‘it looks
right.’10 This doesn’t necessarily mean that every detail must be the same, only
that the overall appearance conforms to the earliest issues, which created the orig-
inal reputation.11 A modern example would be the new series of U.S. quarters
honoring each of the fifty states. The ‘heads’ (obverse) looks close enough to the
old series of quarters so that most users of the new quarter never notice the differ-
ence. Each of the new quarters’ ‘tails’ (reverse) is unique with information associ-
ated with a special State. Since the color, size, and weight are the same as the old
quarters, all U.S. quarters are exchanged in the market as if they are a single series.
As will be detailed below, a ‘standard’ type of dinar and dirham was created in
Abbasid lands in the third/ninth century, which lasted for over a century despite
the changes of mint, date, caliph, and the inclusion of names of other political or
military leaders on specific coins. This is the second Abbasid monetary epoch.
10. My ideas on ‘reputation’ are derived from Ellis Goldberg. Trade, Reputation, and Child Labor in
Twentieth-Century Egypt (New York: Palgrave, 2004), especially Chapter 2.
11. Sometimes minor changes can impact a market. Luke Treadwell brought to my attention the
case of when the Austrian authorities made what they considered minor changes to the veil of Maria
Theresa’s portrait on the Maria Theresa dollar, and Yemeni merchants initially refused to accept the
new coin. A more current example involves U.S. currency. A short time after U.S. authorities changed
the size of the portraits on U.S. paper money and made other changes to make it harder to counterfeit
this currency, merchants in most of the world rejected the old U.S. currency with the smaller figure,
although the older variety continued to be accepted within the U.S. In one case reputation was retained
by the original Maria Theresa coins and, in the second, it switched entirely to the new U.S. $100
currency.
8 On Coinage
The preceding observations about the nature of numismatic evidence are rele-
vant because my primary task in the next two chapters will be to offer an interpreta-
tion of the meaning of a significant variant and/or new coinage at the time it is
introduced. If the only change on the coin is that of a new date, I do not consider this
a significant change and no comment is necessary. The addition of new names, titles
or religious expressions on Ikhshidid coinage are the type of data I will interpret.
I will also argue that the inclusion of a certain isolated letter on the coinage for one
chronological period carried a clear meaning but its use at an earlier period is unre-
lated and unknown.For those coins inscribed that they were minted in Mecca, I will
treat them in two categories: those that looked like the regular dinars and dirhams
minted in Palestine and Egypt and those that looked like contemporary coins struck
in Western Arabia and Yemen. As noted above this is the concept of monetary zones,
that is a geographic area where all the coins “looked” alike although the actual
inscriptions differed. Before the detailed study of Ikhshidid coinage, a base line for
second epoch Abbasid coinage will be developed in the last section of this chapter.
What is in it?
Production involves striking a flat piece of metal called a flan between two dies
resulting in markings, which are meaningful to those who ordered production of
the coinage. The earliest Greek coins were struck on flans of electrum, an occurring
alloy of gold and silver in varying percentages. Greek mint masters as well as all
who followed them in manufacturing coins learned to control the composition of
the ore for the coins. With the technology available, gold coins could be struck on
flans made from ingots of almost pure gold while the same could be done for silver.
Thus, some series of coins could earn a reputation as being composed of 100% of
that metal. Throughout history certain numismatic series earned such a ‘reputa-
tion,’ such as the silver Athenian owls of the Ancient Greek world and the gold
Venetian ducats for the late medieval and early modern worlds.
Ancient and medieval forgers learned that a profit could be made by producing
forgeries of such circulating coins in which they decreased the percentage of gold or
silver below that of the legal currency.12 However, a far more serious problem for
12. For textual and limited numismatic evidence for medieval forgeries and the fate suffered by the
forgers in 15th century Egypt see Jere L. Bacharach, “Foreign. Coins, Forgers and Forgeries in Fif-
teenth Century Egypt.” Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of Numismatists, Herbert A. Cahn
and Georges Le Rider, ed. (Paris-Bales: Association internationale des numismates professionnels—
Publication No. 4, 1976): 501–11. There is also a general discussion in Carl F. Petry, The Criminal
Underworld in a Medieval Islamic society: Narratives from Cairo and Damascus under the Mamluks
On Coinage 9
ancient and medieval markets was debasement, which was the deliberate action of
an issuing authority without informing the users of the coinage. Throughout history,
chronicles and other textual sources record public protests over such debasements,
but the best source for identifying these debasements are still the coins themselves.
Unfortunately, looking at a coin rarely tells you if it has been debased unless
the percentage of gold or silver removed is so great that the color looks wrong,
that is, it is too pale. There are other popular but inaccurate methods for ‘testing’
the quality of a coin, such as biting and bouncing. The most precise method to
find the purity of a series of coins is to take a set weight of the circulating coinage,
melt them in order to separate the pure gold or silver, weigh the ‘pure’ metal, and
then calculate the ‘pure’ metal as a percentage of the original weight. The result is
a percentage or degree of purity. While medieval rulers and minters including al-
Ikhshid are known to have used this method, modern museum curators and col-
lectors look unkindly upon this process, which would permanently destroy their
coins. Thus other methods had to be developed.
The traditional method for calculating the purity of gold is called ‘the specific
gravity method.’ It is based on the fact that gold has a higher specific gravity than
any of the metals with which it is debased. This means that if you debase a gold
coin with any of the usual metals—silver, copper, or lead—the debased coin’s
specific gravity will still be less than that of a pure gold coin. The method, known
to the Greeks and called today Archimedes’ Principle, involves weighing a gold
coin on a scale, then again in pure water, calculating the resulting specific gravity
of the coin and comparing that number with a standardized table, such as the one
published by the chemist Earle R. Caley.13 The purer the coin, the more accurate
the table since the differences between the specific gravities of silver, copper, and
lead are not significant when the amounts of these impurities are small. The accu-
racy of the method begins to decline as the percentage of gold in the debased coin
decreases. For most historical studies, the margin of error is inconsequential since
the goal of the specific gravity tests is to demonstrate a pattern, such as one of
deliberate debasement by the issuing authority, not the exact amount of gold in
(Chicago: Chicago Studies on the Middle East 9, 2012). Modem forgeries are also a problem but they
tend to concentrate around issues with a high market value. Therefore, the most common modern for-
gery of an Islamic issue is that of the first all-epigraphic dinars issued in A.H. 77.
13. Earle R. Caley, “Validity of the Specific Gravity Method for the Determination of the Fineness
of Gold Objects,” Ohio Journal of Science 49 (1949): 73–82. A more recent discussion with updated
tables is W.A. Oddy and M. J. Hughes, “The Specific Gravity Method for the Analysis of Gold Coins,”
Methods of Chemical and Metallurgical Investigation of Ancient Coinage, ⌭. T. Hall and D. M. Metcalf,
ed. (London: Royal Numismatic Society Special Publication No. 8, 1972): 75–87.
10 On Coinage
any single coin. W.A. Oddy of the British Museum and I undertook separately
specific gravity tests on dinars struck by Ikhshidids and the results of the seventy-
one gold specimens will be presented in the next chapter.
This non-destructive technique for calculating the purity of dinars cannot be
applied to silver coins. As indicated above, the specific gravity of silver falls between
lead and copper and so it would be possible to mix all three metals, and create a seem-
ingly ‘pure’ silver coin with the correct specific gravity for a pure silver one. Melting
silver coins to test for their purity inhibits the use of that procedure by most modern
scholars although a few have used it.14 Fortunately, another chemist, Adon A. Gordus,
developed a method which uses a low-level neutron activation analysis to test silver
coins for their purity and return them safely to their owners.15 Results of his tests on
nine dirhams minted by the Ikhshidid rulers will also be included in the next chapter.
Striking Coins
Numismatists assume that their colleagues in other fields know how coins are
minted, but my presentations and informal discussions with other scholars have
led me to the opposite conclusion. Therefore, a few words on how the flan, that
flat piece of prepared metal, turns into a coin, along with a few additional techni-
cal terms, have been included in this section. Coins are made by causing a flan to
be struck by two dies, which are in turn inscribed with the agreed upon/author-
ized designs, figures, inscriptions, and such by the issuing authority. Once the data
needed on the coinage were agreed upon, specialists carved the dies and prepared
the metal for the flans.16 The flan was then set on top of one of the dies, while the
minter held the upper die and hit the other end of that die with a hammer. The
top die smashed into the flan creating an impression while pushing the bottom
part of the flan into the lower die creating a second impression on the other side
of the flan. The coin, which often stuck to the top die, was dropped into a basket
and another flan was then placed on the bottom die.
14. Paul Balog’s tables on the purity of dirhams circulating in Egypt in his various works are derived
from his melting “duplicates” of pieces he owned.
15. Adon A. Gordus, “Neutron Activation Analysis on Coins and Coin-streaks,” Methods of Chemi-
cal and Metallurgical Investigation of Ancient Coinage, E. T. Hall and D. M. Metcalf, ed. (London: Royal
Numismatic Society Special Publication No. 8, 1972): 127–48 and Gordus, “Non-Destructive Analysis
of Parthian, Sasanian and Umayyad Silver Coins,” Near Eastern Numismatics, Iconography, Epigraphy
and History: Studies in Honor of George C. Miles, Dickran Kouymjian, ed. (Beirut: American University
of Beirut Press, 1974): 141–62.
16. Treadwell. Buyid Coins: A Corpus (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2001), xvii-xviii.
On Coinage 11
Greeks quickly learned that the lower die, called the anvil die, lasted longer
than the upper or trussel die. Since the dies did not run out at the same rate and
the trussel die had to be replaced more often than the anvil one, Greeks placed
the die needed to create the higher relief on the lower side. Scholars of Classical
numismatics then named the side with the higher relief, which came to include
gods, deified rulers, and other rulers the obverse or in modern popular culture,
‘heads.’17 The other side of the coin was labeled the reverse (‘tails’). Most Islamic
dinars and dirhams are characterized by low relief, that is, the script and layout are
the dominant elements and the problems in producing deep relief for images of
humans or animals are not a concern. In addition, the flans for Islamic coins tend
to be relatively thin. The result is that there is no high relief or obvious religious
or political figure, which must be inscribed on the lower/anvil/obverse die.
In addition, adequate Islamic numismatic evidence is lacking to establish a consis-
tent pattern of which side was the obverse.18 As a result scholars of Islamic coin-
age can define which face they wish to be the obverse. This study defines the
obverse as the face with the affirmation of God’s unity (shahada).19
The distinction between obverse and reverse was extremely important for
Classical numismatics and became the basis for studies of die linkages. This
means that if one obverse was used with different reverse dies and one of the
reverses is used with a new obverse die, this last reverse die bridged two obverse
dies. Using this approach it is possible to link usually undated issues to one
another and, in some cases, put them in a chronological order. While this meth-
odology is rarely needed in the study of Islamic coinage, where the issues are
usually dated, one example of the use of die links for identifying an issue as Ikh-
shidid will be given in the next chapter using the analysis of a series of Ikhshidid
presentation pieces with human figures.20 Another technical numismatic term is
muling. A muling is when a flan is struck by obverse and reverse dies which
17. ”Obverse” was first used in 1877 for the side of a coin with a portraiture. Oxford English Dic-
tionary (No ”www.” address is available as the web-based version reached through University of Wash-
ington Library portal is for authorized use only.)
18. Jere L. Bacharach and Henri Amin Awad, “The Problem of the Obverse and the Reverse in
Islamic Numismatics.” Numismatic Chronicle. 7th series. XIII (1973): 183–91 and Addendum by N.M.
Lowick, 190–91. Books and articles prepared in the Middle East such as those authored by Balog or
Fahmi identify the side with Muhammad rasul Allah as the obverse. Thus, it is essential that when com-
paring data from different sources, care is taken to note how a particular author defines obverse and
reverse.
19. The best discussion on the complexities related to which side of a Muslim coin is the obverse
and which is the reverse can be found in Album, Checklist, 15.
20. An excellent example of the use of a die link study for Islamic numismatics is Tony Goodwin’s
chapter “The Pre-reform Coinage of Ba‘albek: a Die Study,” in Arab-Byzantine Coinage (London: Nour
12 On Coinage
don’t belong together.21 While rare, mulings do accord and one example will be
given in the following chapter. Double struck refers to a flan which has been
struck twice by the same set of dies. Again, there is one example of a double
struck coin from the Ikhshidid period which will be noted below. A final techni-
cal term, brockage, refers to a coin where a previously struck flan sticks to one of
the two dies and the result is that the new flan is composed of one side with a
normal inscription and the other side has an incused retrograde image of the
same die.22 There are no known brockages of Ikhshidid coins.
Recording Coins
Kennet’s second category is ‘issue/supply,’ a quantitative issue, which is very difficult
to calculate. Without textual data, numismatists have turned to identifying the num-
ber of dies for a series as a means of calculating the relative output. Rarely has this
been done for Islamic numismatics, but that, trend is changing. Luke Treadwell’s
Buyid Coins: A Corpus is the first published study of a major Muslim dynasty in
which all die variants in addition to coin types are available.23 Sylloges, illustrated
volumes of every identifiable coin in a collection, can lay the groundwork for future
die studies. Sylloges presently being produced for the collections in Oxford and
T€ubingen are arranged according to geographical region and not dynasty, and thus
are setting the standards for this new approach to Islamic numismatics.24 Finally,
numismatic collections are becoming available on line. As the digital images of their
Islamic holdings are beginning to appear, it will likely be the most effective and cost-
efficient way to make these data available to a worldwide community of scholars.25
Museums and collectors have one thing in common and that is a desire to col-
lect at least one example of every coin variety. Curators and collectors seek each
unique mint, date, and ruler combination and, often, then add specimens with var-
iations in titles, additional inscriptions, and changes in layout. A catalogue, which
draws upon these public and private data, can be analyzed for general trends. For
example, if coins are found for a particular series minted over a number of years
from a specific mint and then none are known from these collections from the
Foundation in association with Azimuth Editions, 2005): Studies in the Khalili Collection Volume IV:
49–83.
21. Album, Checklist, 15.
22. Ibid.
23. Treadwell, Buyid Coins, xvii–xviii.
24. See note 13 and the bibliography for references to the Ashmolean sylloge T€ubingen series.
25. See http://numismatics.org and especially http://numismatics.org/OnlineResources/Links.
On Coinage 13
same mint for a number of succeeding years, it is possible to suggest trends on
the relative activity of that mint. But this argument can’t be pushed too far. The
absence of coins for the second period in this example does not prove that the
mint stopped issuing coins. New coins may be discovered for the missing years,
but it is likely that the relative output was very small, at best, compared to those
years for which many specimens are known. A few general observations on the
relative production of Ikhshidid mints in Egypt and Palestine based upon the data
in the accompanying catalogue will be presented in the following chapters.
A better indication of the character of circulating coinage comes from coin
hoards, but again they must be used with caution. Hoards, which enter museums
and private collections from the market, may not reflect the original composition
because dealers may have removed particularly valuable pieces for sale separately
or very poor pieces fearing that there was no market for them. The best evidence
on circulating coins comes from hoards found in situ and one example associated
with the end of the Ikhshidid dynasty will be cited in Chapter Three.
The most widely used form of publication, the last of Kennet’s categories, is the
catalogue. The data for the catalogue in this book were collected from publications,
correspondence, visits to museums, and the examination of pieces in private collec-
tions. In contrast to the studies of Luke Treadwell and Stuart D. Sears, where every
specimen examined was illustrated in their studies of Buyid and Arab-Sasanian
coinage respectively, this study lacks the complete photographic record. There is
neither a photographic image of every coin by metal-mint-die-ruler nor is it possible
to illustrate every die variant as was done in the Treadwell study.26
The accompanying catalogue also lacks another new approach, museum
archaeology, which is critical in determining whether a coin is an isolated specimen
or has appeared in other publications.27 A coin first housed in a private collection
or listed in a sales catalogue can go through a number of hands until it becomes
part of a permanent museum collection, and could have been listed in more than
one publication, implying that a number of examples of this particular combination
of ruler, mint, date, and metal existed when, in fact, the listed items were for the
same coin. Museum archaeology is useful for establishing if a coin was part of a
26. Treadwell. Buyid Coins. Stuart D. Sears, “A Monetary History of Iraq and Iran, ca. 500–750
C.E.,”
Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation (University of Chicago, 1995).
27. An excellent introduction to this concept is Sarah Clarkson, “Museum Archaeology and Coptic
Papyrology: The Bawit Papyri,” Coptic Studies on the Threshold of a New Millennium: Proceedings of the
Seventh International Congress of Coptic Studies, Mat Immerzeel and Jacques van der Vliet, ed. (Leuven:
Uitgeverij Peeters, 2004): vol. I: 477–90.
14 On Coinage
hoard. Still, a catalogue drawing primarily on museum holdings, private collections,
and sales catalogues can tell us something about relative production trends.
Earlier catalogues of Islamic coins listed specimens by dynasty and then geo-
graphic region. In many cases the occupation of a mint town by a political power
and the appearance of coins, which can be identified with that dynasty, do not offer
a problem. For example, the first Ayyubid gold coins in Egypt may ‘look’ like Fati-
mid Shi’ite issues with the inscriptions placed in concentric circles, but the inscrip-
tions make it very clear that a new Sunni power controlled the mint.28 The case is
not so simple for some dynasties during what Michael Bates has identified as the
second Abbasid monetary epoch, 218–334/833–946.29 Many parts of the central
Islamic world acknowledged the spiritual authority of an Abbasid caliph in Iraq, but
some very powerful governors asserted control over all the local resources including
determining what would be inscribed on the coinage minted in their lands. Eventu-
ally, some of these governors signaled one form of political independence by adding
their name or title to the coinage of the mints under their control. Examples of such
regional Sunni powers whose issues are listed in standard catalogues only when
their names appeared on the coinage are shown in the following table:
Since coins, with a clear indication of their Ikhshidid origin did not appear until
the 330s, catalogues list dinars and dirhams minted earlier in Egypt and Palestine
under the Abbasid caliph named on the coinage, not the Ikhshidids. Returning to
my first assumption that Muhammad ibn Tughj controlled Egypt and Palestine
from 324/935, I consider the coinage issued from that year by those mints under
his control to be Ikhshidid coinage. Therefore appropriate coins from Egypt and
Syria in lands he controlled from 324 are listed in the catalogue and are analyzed in
the next chapter.30 Coins with the name of an Ikhshidid family member minted after
358, the year the Fatimids conquered Egypt and the traditional end date for the Ikh-
shidid period of rule, will also be examined below and are included in the catalogue.
28. Jere L. Bacharach and Sherif Anwar, “Coinage and their Visual Messages in the Age of the Sulta-
nate: The Case of Egypt and Syria,” Annales Islamologique 46 (2013): 15–44.
29. See for an overview Michael Bates’, “The Abbasid Coinage System, 833–946” available at
http://www.amnumsoc.org/collections/abbasid.html. A detailed study of this period is included in his
monumental, but unfortunately still unpublished, study of the political developments and the use of
nomenclature on the coins of this period. I am greatly indebted to Michael Bates for sharing this work
with me. Bates, Michael, “The Expression of Nobility in the Abbasid Caliphate, 218–334 A.H./833–945
C.E. “(Working title: Forthcoming).
30. A limited number of Ikhshidid issues minted in Egypt and Palestine were included in the recent
Cairo University M.A. thesis on Tulunid and Ikhshidid coinage by Ali Hasan. Ali Hasan Abd Allah
Hasan, “Al-Nuqud al-Misriya fi’-l’asrayn al-Tuluniyi wa’l-Ikhshididi, Unpublished M.A. Thesis (Cairo:
College of Archaeology, Cairo University, 2003).
On Coinage 15
Table 1
Selected dynasties and their catalogued coinage
Monetary Zones
Signs, symbols, or letters do not carry the same value for all times and in all cultures.
For example, the reasons for the use of a geometric six-pointed star on the coinage
produced by the medieval Muslim ruler Saladin and the use of the same design cen-
turies later on the currency of the State of Israel are totally unrelated.31 But if one
dominant layout is used and the coinage gains a ‘reputation’ for quality and reliabil-
ity, then a monetary zone in which that style coin can circulate easily is created and,
to the degree ‘reputation’ is carried outside that zone, the coinage is still valued.
In the immediate post-Ikhshid Egyptian world of 358/969, Fatimid dinars were
minted with a series of inscriptions in concentric circles (bullseye pattern), which
was derived from Fatimid theology.32 While the original possible religious connota-
tion of the coinage was lost, the ‘bullseye’ coinage gained a ‘reputation for quality,
which led some non-Isma‘ili Muslim dynasties to mint dinars in the same style.33
31. A six-pointed star motif was used on a lintel at the isolated citadel of Saladin in Sadr, the Sinai,
which is known as Qal’at al-Gindi. Tareq Abdel Hamid writes “This motif must have angered some
modern restorer, for the six-pointed star, which is now recognized not as a symbol of Salah El-Din but
as the symbol of the State of Israel has been chiseled out almost completely, and the name Allah
engraved instead.” Tarek M.G. Abdel Hamid, “Notes on Military Architecture of the Ayyubid Period,”
Unpublished M.A. Thesis (Cairo: The American University in Cairo, 2005).
32. Irene A. Bierman, Writing Signs: The Fatimid Public Text (Berkeley: U.C. Press, 1998): 62–70;
and Bierman, “Inscribing the City: Fatimid Cairo,” Islamische Textilkunst des Mittelalters: Aktuelle Prob-
leme, Muhammad ‘Abbas Muhammad Salim, ed. (Riggisberg: Abegg-Stiftung, 1997): 105–14.
33. Norman D. Nicol, “Islamic Coinage in Imitation of Fatimid Types,” INJ 10 (1988–89): 58–70.
16 On Coinage
Thus, while the original theological ‘meaning’ was lost, the Fatimid ‘bullseye’ gold
coins gained a ‘reputation’ based upon their layout for quality.
Within Islamic numismatic studies, the idea of monetary zones can be very
important.34 Two monetary zones characterized the Late Antique Middle Eastern
world.35 One was effectively Iraq, Iran, and parts of Central Asia dominated by
Sasanian silver coinage with a portrait of the reigning sovereign on the obverse
(heads/front) and a fire-altar with two attendants on the reverse (tails/back).
The second zone was dominated by gold coinage, which included figures associ-
ated with the Byzantine ruler and his family and had clear Christian symbols.
From 77/696 a new all epigraphic Arabic Muslim coin quickly came to dominate
lands under Muslim control from Spain to Central Asia, creating a new, larger
monetary zone. From the end of the reign of the Abbasid caliph al-Ma’mun (d.
218/833) the circulating Abbasid coinage was replaced by a new layout, which
was very easy to ‘read’ without the viewer knowing a word of Arabic. Part of the
‘reputation’ of this second epoch Muslim coinage was its association with Sunni
Islam and the Abbasid caliphate.
34. Jere L. Bacharach, “Thoughts on Pennies and Other Monies,” MESA Bulletin 35.1 (Summer
2001): 2–14.
35. S. Heidemann, “The merger of two currency zones in early Islam: The Byzantine and Sasanian
impact on the circulation in former Byzantine Syria and Northern Mesopotamia,” Iran 36 (1998):
95–112.
36. Jere L. Bacharach, “Signs of Sovereignty: the shahada, Qur’anic verses, and the coinage of Abd
al-Malik (65–86/685–705),” Muqarnas 27 (2010): 1–30.
On Coinage 17
identified the coin as a dinar and gave the Muslim date in which it was minted.
Neither the name of the caliph nor the name of the mint was included on these
new dinars.
Two years later a standard for all-epigraphic dirhams was established by the
Umayyads. Both dinars and dirhams were written in a Kufic script. The silver
coins included extended versions of the Qur’anic material found on dinars but
not on the same side as the dinar and dirhams were inscribed with the name of
the mint. Therefore, Umayyad dinars and dirhams differed from one another.
When the Abbasids came to power in 132/750, they dropped Qur’anic Sura 112
from the center of their coinage and replaced it with the phrase Muhammad
rasul Allah. The other differences between dinars and dirhams continued under
the early Abbasids. In addition, some mints started to produce dirhams with
additional data such as the name of a local official, regional governor, or desig-
nated successor to the reigning caliph. How much control the central adminis-
tration had over these local developments has been subject to academic
debate.37
A second fundamental turning point in the history of Islamic numismatics
took place during the reign of the Abbasid Caliph al-Ma’mun (198–218/813–33),
which Tayeb El-Hibri explored in an extremely important article in 1993.38 By
the end of his reign, al-Ma’mun had accomplished the following: First of all, a sec-
ond marginal inscription had been added to the side of the coin with the mint-
date formula, which was from Qur’an 30: 4–5, and appropriate for al-Ma’mun’s
victory over his brother al-Amin; Secondly, the differences between the inscrip-
tions on dinars and dirhams and their arrangements was eliminated so that the
inscriptions were organized in the same locations on dinars and dirhams and were
uniform in wording; Lastly, a different style Kufic script was used, which made
distinguishing the new-style Abbasid dinars and dirhams from the earlier ones
even easier. Studies by El-Hibri indicated that al-Ma’mun also set about to
increase the fineness of his dinars and maintain a stricter standard for their
weights.39
37. Norman D. Nicol, “Early Abbasid Administration in the Central and Eastern Provinces, 132–
218 A.H./750–833 A.D.” Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation (Seattle: University of Washington, 1979) cov-
ers data from four provinces illustrating the variety of types issued by Abbasid governors during
this era.
38. Tayeb El-Hibri, “Coinage Reform under the Abbasid Caliph al-Ma’mun,” JESHO 36 (1993):
58–83.
39. Ibid. 71–72 and Appendices III, IV and V.
18 On Coinage
Bates continues the story of Islamic coinage for the second Abbasid monetary
epoch in the heartland of the empire in his magnum opus on the Abbasid coinage
system, 218–334/833–946.40 He carefully analyzes the coinage of each caliph in
light of the actual political developments, tracing the careers of those designated
on the coinage to succeed as caliphs versus those who actually came to hold the
title. As Bates writes, “ . . . our story starts on the first day of the Muslim year 219
(16 January 834), because in that year all coins, for the first time, have the name
of al-Mu’tasim billah (218–227/833–842) in addition to the standard inscrip-
tions, whereas in the previous six months of his reign, until the end of 218, the
coinage continued to be anonymous.41
At this point, it is necessary to describe the layout of these new-style Abbasid
dinars and dirhams since the following discussions will make reference to their
obverse and reverse field and marginal inscriptions.42
Figure 1.1
Standard second Abbasid monetary epoch coin.
On Coinage 19
Parts of a Muslim Name
Having established that there was a common layout for dinars and dirhams in the
post-al-Ma’mun Sunni Abbasid world, the next step was to determine whose
names appeared on this second Abbasid monetary epoch coinage. The ‘who’ was
complicated because a medieval Muslim name was composed of many parts and
which element would appear was not immediately obvious. The structure of a
Muslim name is important and involves a number of elements.43
Each Muslim has an ism or proper name such as Muhammad. The individual
is entered in biographical dictionaries by their ism. The ism is followed by a nasab,
which refers to one’s pedigree or ancestors, such as Ibn Tughj (son of Tughj).
In the examples that follow, the most common form of an Ikhshidid name is the
ism-nasab combination such as Muhammad ibn Tughj. Another example comes
from the Tulunid era (254–292/808–905) where the first ‘Tulunid’ coinage
appears with the ism-nasab Ahmad bin Tulun.44
43. Annemarie Schimmel, Islamic Names (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1995) 2nd ed:
1–13.
44. Oleg Grabar. The Coinage of the Tulunids (New York: ANS Museum Notes and Monographs
139, 1957).
20 On Coinage
Table 2
Parts of a Muslim name.
kunya A teknonym in the sense “of farher . . . ” which may refer to one’s actual
child or an epithet or honorific sense of parentage.
ism A proper name, usually given at birth and the name under which an individ-
ual would be found in medieval dictionaries.
nasab A patronym in the sense of “son of . . . ” which may refer to one’s actual
father or an epithet or honorific name.
laqab An honorific title, which can be earned or acquired as in the case al-Ikhshid.
Abbasid caliphs were known by their laqabs, which were often compound
names ending in a reference to God (Allah). Other compound names
ended in al-Dawla (State) as in Nasir al-Dawla (Defender of the Stare).
nisba This is a broad category of names, which included professions, places of ori-
gin, or original ownership, in the case of those of slave origin, such as al-Ikh-
shidi (Belonging to al-Ikhshid).
On Coinage 21
was a general category including nicknames, places of origin, or relationship to a
former owner. According to the chronicles, Kafur (d. 357/968), the African
eunuch who was the effective ruler during most of the period after Muhammad
ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid’s death in 334/946 held the nisba al-Ikhshidi.48 None of the
components of Kafur’s name—his kunya, ism, nasab, or nisba—would be
inscribed on the regular dinars and dirhams of Egypt or Palestine. Finally, another
title found on Islamic struck pieces from this era is that of mawla amir al-mu’mi-
nin, which carried a prestigious meaning during this epoch.49
Figure 1.2
Second Abbasid monetary epoch coin demonstrating ranking of names.
Returning to the post-al-Ma’mun coinage, Bates discovered that for the mints
of central Iraq up to 334/945 there was a clear hierarchy in the arrangement of
names found on Abbasid coins. God appears first in the form of the shahada on
the obverse of these coins. This inscription is followed on the reverse by the nam-
ing of God’s Messenger, the Prophet Muhammad, who is succeeded by his suc-
cessor, the caliph, whose laqab appears under that of the Prophet. Bates then
went on to note that if a successor was named to the caliph that person’s name
appeared under the main inscription (shahada) on the obverse. If there was no
son named, other officials such as a wazir might be named in that location. This
meant that the first name under the shahada on the obverse ranked second after
the caliph. If additional individuals were named, the person ranking third
appeared on the reverse under the caliph’ s laqab and if a fourth person was
48. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira fi muluk Misr wa’l-Qahirah (Cairo: Dar al-Kutub al-Mis-
riya, 1944), IV: 1.
49. Ibid., 344–48.
22 On Coinage
named, the least frequent to appear, it was inscribed under the name on the
obverse. In summary, the hierarchy of names went 1—reverse, 2—obverse, 3—
reverse under 1, and 4—obverse under 2.50 Knowledge of this ordering and the
use of particular parts of a Muslim name will have a direct bearing on the analysis
of the coins issued by Muhammad ibn Tughj and his successors.
Concluding Observations
In addition to the coinage described above, there were special issues whose primary
function was outside the normal monetary system; these are pieces struck for pur-
poses of presentation or honoring someone or something. Bates noted that medieval
Muslim writers had no special terminology for these coins and they could be
inscribed with the names of persons who were not entitled to be on regular circulat-
ing coins; or with names of persons who were subordinate on regular coins, without
the names of their normal superiors; as well as in the names of the caliph without
the names that accompanied him on regular coins.51 Therefore, presentation or don-
ative pieces are particularly important because they include non-traditional data.52
If a careful study of Ikhshidid regular dinars and dirhams enables us to establish
the ‘rules’ for what could be struck on medieval Muslim coins, then presentation
pieces are the exceptions to the rules’ and illuminate additional ways in which the
Muslim rulers wished to portray themselves. Ikhshidid presentation pieces include
a number of titles not found on their regular coinage. There are even a series of
coins with human figures which will be analyzed in the next chapter.
Historically the rulers of Egypt have attempted to dominate the Hijaz, particu-
larly the holy cities of Mecca and Medina. The few Meccan coins that can be asso-
ciated with the Ikhshidids will be examined in the second and third chapters.
During the third/tenth century there were very few copper coins minted in Abba-
sid lands.53 The two published Ikhshidid copper coins which look like regular
coins were probably medieval forgeries of silver issues. But there are now two
known Ikhshidid copper issues whose inscriptions are unique and appear to have
been minted in Anatolia. These, also, will be examined in the third chapter.
On Coinage 23
Chapter 2
Coinage from the Reign of
Muhammad ibn Tughj
(323–334/935–946)
Background
In 358/969, Sunni Abbasid Egypt was conquered by the Fatimids, an Isma‘ili Shi‘ite
dynasty. During the preceding thirty-five years Egypt, Palestine, and occasionally
other parts of Greater Syria had been governed by one family or the leading mili-
tary figure associated with that family. For reasons that will be explained below,
these rulers are known as the Ikhshidids (323–358/935–969) and it is the coinage
issued by them or in their name that is the subject of the following analysis.1 One
goal of this undertaking is to demonstrate the interdependence of numismatic and
narrative evidence. Some coin inscriptions can only be understood through recon-
structing events based upon data from narrative sources while, at other times,
numismatic evidence raises issues not mentioned in the historical texts or for which
narrative data do not offer an explanation. There will also be examples, when ques-
tions arise from a close study of the numismatic data, for which there is no answer.
Al-Ikhshid, whose full name was Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Tughj ibn Juff, was
the third generation of his family to serve the Abbasid caliphate.2 His grandfather,
Juff, was among the military slaves (mamluks) imported from non-Islamic Central
1. The best overview of the whole period is Thierry Bianquis, “Autonomous Egypt from Ibn Tulun
to Kafur, 868–969,” The Cambridge History of Egypt, Carl ⌭ Petry, ed. (Cambridge: CUR 1998) I:
86–119.
2. The most extensive biography of Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid is Jere L. Bacharach, “The
Career of Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid: A Tenth Century Governor of Egypt,” Speculum L
(1975): 586–612 from which most of the following is taken.
Asia, probably the Farghana region. His father, Tughj, began his career in Iraq where
Muhammad ibn Tughj was born on 15 Rajab 268/8 February 882. Tughj went on
to serve the Tulunid dynasty of Egypt and Syria (254–292/868–905). He held the
governorships of Damascus, Tiberias, and Aleppo and was one of the most impor-
tant Tulunid generals.3 Muhammad ibn Tughj gained his first administrative and
military experience during this period, serving as governor of Tiberias for his father.4
In 292/905 the Abbasid general Muhammad ibn Sulayman ended the Tulu-
nid dynasty. Tughj successfully transferred his allegiance to Muhammad ibn
Sulayman and was rewarded governorship of Aleppo. This momentary change in
fortune came to naught as Tughj’s new patron was arrested and charged with
withholding booty from the caliphal court. The general, Tughj, and his two sons
Muhammad and ‘Ubayd Allah were all imprisoned.5 Tughj died in prison in 294/
906, while his sons were released shortly thereafter.
Political intrigues in Baghdad in 296/908 forced Muhammad ibn Tughj to
flee to Syria, where he found a new patron.6 Within a year Ibn Tughj was in Egypt
continuing in the service of the same man and later his son. His career took
another step forward when another governor of Egypt made him governor of
Amman and the region east of the Jordan River.
Career opportunities continued to improve for him as he built up marriage
alliances and political ties with key figures in Baghdad. He established a stronger
administrative and military record with another stint in Egypt and then the gover-
norship of Damascus. This line of progress culminated with his appointment as
the governor of Egypt with a letter reaching Fustat on 7 Ramadan 321/31 August
933 to that effect. Muhammad ibn Tughj was in Damascus at the time and sent
an agent to Egypt as his representative.7 Thirty-two days later, the Abbasid caliph
named someone else as governor of Egypt and Muhammad ibn Tughj’s first gov-
ernorship ended without his ever entering the country. As Bates observed in his
3. Details on the career of Tughj ibn Juff can be found in Ibn Sa‘id, Al-Mughrib fi hula al-Magrib I,
K.L. Tallquist, ed. (Helsingsfor-Leiden, 1899), 4–11. Ibn Khallikan, Wafat al-a‘yan wa anba’ al-zaman
(Bulag, 1299/1881) II: 53–54; English translation, Ibn Kballikan’s Biographical Dictionary, MacGuckin
de Slane, trans. (London 1842–1871): III: 218–219. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira fi muluk Misr
wa-l-Qahirah, III (Cairo, Dar al-Kutub al-Misriya, 1943), 235–44.
4. Sa’id, Al-Mughrib fi bula al-Magrib, 5.
5. Ibn al-‘Adim, Zubdat al-halab min ta’rikh Halab, S. Dahan, ed. (Damascus, Institut Francais de
Damas, 1951–1968), 91; Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira III, 135.
6. His new patron was Abu’l-Abbas al-Bisam and among Muhammad ibn Tughj’s duties was carry-
ing his master’s hawk during the hunt. Ibn Sa‘id, Al-Mughrib fi hula al-Magrib, 7.
7. Beginning with reign of the Caliph al-Ma’mun, it was not uncommon for appointees to send rep-
resentatives while they stayed in the capital. A. A. Duri, “Amir,” Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed., I: 439.
University Press, 1998) I: 112–13. The seriousness of the Fatimid threat is downplayed by Lev who
believes that the Fatimid expedition of 307/919 marked the last serious military attempt to conquer
Egypt before 358/969. I believe that for contemporaries the possibility of the Fatimids invading Egypt
or, at least, supporting rebellious factions in Egypt was very real and Muhammad ibn Tughj was able to
use that potential threat to his advantage once he consolidated power. Yaacov Lev, “The Fatimids and
Egypt 301–358/914–969,” Arabica XXXV (1988): 193.
12. For an overview of the Fatimid activities see Lev, Ibid.,186–96.
13. There was a minor pro-Shi‘ite revolt in Egypt in 330/942 while al-Ikhshid was in Syria. The
revolt came to naught and did very little to upset the general tranquility of the period. Al-Kindi, Gover-
nors and Judges of Egypt, 294–95.
14. Jere L. Bacharach, “Reading’ Egyptian and Syrian Islamic Coinage,” Power of Gold, Golds of
Power: Exhibition of Gold Coins in the Yapi Kredi Collection, Sennur Senturk, Coordinator (Istanbul:
Yepi Kredi Yayainlari, 2004), 69–77.
What makes this coin obviously different from the standard second Abbasid dir-
hams is its size. The flan is significantly smaller than that of a normal dirham, that is,
it is 17mm versus an average of 24mm for a regular dirham. Therefore, there is a vis-
ual message that this silver coin is not part of the regular production and warrants a
closer examination. The presentation piece includes, on its obverse, in the name
Muhammad ibn Tughj in Arabic. In theory, the appearance of the governor’s name
would mean that he has usurped the Caliph al-Radi’s right of sikka and, without any
evidence of caliphal approval or authorization, has inscribed his name on the
15. This issue was brought to my attention in the review article by David J. Wasserstein, particularly
his comments on the lack of specific data on the one dirham attributed to Damascus in 324. I thank
him for his input and I have dropped the item from the catalogue.
Figure 2.2
Presentation piece in the name of al-Radi and Muhammad ibn
Tughj (214/MS32Xb).
Another set of presentation pieces was studied by Ariel Berman, the first two
pieces of which are presented here.19 These have simple inscriptions. On the first
Figure 2.3
Presentation piece in the name of al-Radi and Muhammad ibn Tughj with a tamga
(215/MS32Xc).
The second piece carries, on the reverse, the caliph’s laqab al-Radi billah in
the center but now the margin includes the shorter version of the shahada. The
obverse margin identifies Misr as the mint while the center includes only one
name, Muhammad. This has to be Muhammad ibn Tughj as he was the only gov-
ernor of Egypt during the caliphate of al-Radi with the ism Muhammad. The space
above his name is filled by a symbolic device, which Berman suggested may be a
type of Central Asian tamga.20 A tamga is a design often associated with a Central
Asian tribe or political entity and was probably first used for marking ownership
of horses and other animals. It then moved on to mark a clan or tribal belonging
and eventually an ethno-political symbol and sui generic heraldic emblem among
20. Ibid. Most scholars of Central Asia spell the word as tamga, which I will use, rather than
tamgha.
21. Djangar Ilyasov, “About tamga of the Samarkand governors,” San’at Magazine (Uzbekistan)
2004:3–4 (http://www.sanat.orexca.com/eng/3–4–04/history_art3.shtml)
22. Grabar, Coinage of the Tulunids, 32.
23. Philip Grierson. Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins in the Dumbarton Oaks and Whittemore Collec-
tion. Vol. III: Leo III to Nicephorus III 717–1081 (Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 1973): 68.
24. Martin Hinds in his translation of the Tabari volume on the Umayyad conquests of Central
Asia transliterates the title from the Arabic as Ikhshad rather than the more usual Ikhshid. Al-Tabari,
The History of al-Tabari: The Zenith of the Marwanid House. Martin Hinds, trans. (Albany: SUNY Press,
1990): XXIII, p. 190, n. 628.
25. G. Brykina, “Chach,” Central Asia in the Early Middle Ages: Coins of the Region (1999) (http://
www.kroraina.com/ca/c_cach.htm).
Figure 2.4
Muhammad ibn Tughj’s tamga (ob. 215/MS32Xc) and a Central Asian pre-Islamic
Soghdian coin with the same tamga.
Two other observations can be made about these presentation pieces. First,
they do not include Muhammad ibn Tughj’s honorific laqab al-Ikhshid, which
means that they date from before he received the title. Second, Muhammad ibn
Tughj did not inscribe Abu Bakr, his kunya on these presentation pieces, but the
less prestigious parts of his name, specifically the ism-nasab combination of
Muhammad ibn Tughj. There is no evidence that the Caliph al-Radi called him or
wrote to him by his kunya as the caliph had done with the amir al-’umara Ibn
Ra’iq whom he addressed by his kunya when both were together.The numismatic
evidence as well as the narrative sources indicates that which parts of a person’s
name appeared on the regular coinage and on presentation pieces was important
in fourth/tenth century Middle Eastern society and the differences between
inscribing an ism-nasab, kunya, or laqab, or addressing an individual by one of
these parts of one’s full name, mattered.
26. E. V. Zeimal, “The Circulation of Coins in Central Asia during the Early Medieval Periods
(Fifth–Eighth Centuries A.D.),” Bulletin of the Asia Institute New Series/Vol. 8 (1994), 260. E. Rtve-
ladze, ed. Coins from the National Bank of Uzbekistan: Anniversary Edition (Tashkent: National Bank of
Uzbekistan, 2000): Vol II: numbers 47–50; Vol. III: number 46.
27. Muhammad Abu ‘l-Faraj al-Ush “Traces du classicisme dans la numismatique arabe-islamique,”
Annales Archaeologiques Arabes Syriennes 21 (1971), tome 1–2, (IXe congres international d’archaeolo-
gie classiques): 311, figure 47A.
Finally, Simon Bendall published a small gold coin, reproduced at double size,
having the same seated figure on the obverse and the same two figures on the
reverse, proving that these coins were minted in both gold and silver.29 Bendall
noted that he had discovered the gold coin in the Liverpool University Collection,
which had obtained it in the early 1950s from the Royal Institution of Liverpool
without attribution or provenance. The piece had been labeled an “Indian coin” on
the reasonable grounds that there was an Indian tradition of human representation
on coins and nothing that could tie the gold piece to fourth/tenth century Egypt.30
Examining the gold and silver coins with human representation very closely,
the obverse has a bearded figure seated in a chair modeled on the Byzantine lyre-
backed throne. The figure is encircled with pellets, possibly representing pearls,
29. Simon Bendall, “A Gold Coin of Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid,” INJ 8 (1984–85): 76.
30. Ibid. Liverpool University Museum authorities, who were very helpful, were not able to locate
it. A second specimen came up for sale in late 2014 and was labeled “Byzantine imitation.”
Grierson identifies from the early part of the reign of Constantine VII Porphyro-
genitus (913–959) an extremely rare gold coin the reverse of which has the busts of
the very young, beardless Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus and his mother
Zoe both wearing crowns with a cross on top.36 All later Byzantine issues from the
reign of Constantine VII with two figures on the reverse show at least one of them
bearded. Since the two figures on the Muslim copy are unbearded the possibility that
this particular Byzantine coin was the model for the Ikhshidid issue is very likely.
But, a second and better reason to identify the Muslim imitations with the coin
showing Constantine and his mother Zoe is that this coin type is the only one in the
Byzantine series with one figure wearing the chlamys while the second wears the
interpretation of their symbolic meaning can be found in Michael Barry, Figurative Art in Medieval
Islam and the Riddle of Bihzad of Herat (1465–1535) (Paris: Falmmarion, 2004): 58–66.
35. Grierson, Catlagoue includes many examples.
36. Ibid. Class II: 914–19. Obv. Seated figure of Christ, as on coins of Basil II. Rev. Busts of Con-
stantine and Zoe . . . . “The coin is extremely rare, and one cannot exclude the possibility of its having
been struck in 914, the issue of gold being then suspended until the 920s.” p. 533 and 542. Plate 1:
Numbers 2.1 and 2.2. For more details of Zoe’s appearance see Kriszta Kotsis, “Your body, o empress,
is a treasure of marvelous qualities—Representations of Byzantine Empresses (780–1081)” Unpub-
lished Ph.D. dissertation (University of Washington, 2004): 118–19.
37. An analysis of Fatimid pieces with human representation and their relationship to an Islamic
‘royal’ cycle can be found in E. Grube, “Realism or formalism: notes on some Fatimid luster-painted
ceramic vessels,” Studi in onore I Francesco Gabrieli ne suo ottantesimo compleanno, Renato Traini, ed.
(Roma, 1984), I: 423–31 and Ernest J. Grube, “A Coloured Drawing of the Fatimid Period in the Keir
Collection,” Rivista degli Studi Orientali LIX (1985): 147–74.
38. M. Canard, “Une letter de Muhmmad ibn Tugj al-ihsid emir d’Egypte a l’empereur romain
Lecapene,” Annales de l’Institut d’etudes orientales II (1936): 189–209. Anonymous, Kitab al-Uyun wa-l-
hada’iq fi akhbar al-haqa’iiq, Omar Saidi, ed. (Damas: Institut francais de Damas, 1973). IV: 223. Ibn
Sa‘id, Al-Mughrib fi hula al-Magrib, 12 ff. Additional comments on the letter can be found in Ahmad
M.H. Shboul, “Arab Attitudes towards Byzanrium: Official, Learned, Popular,” Kathegetria: Essays pre-
sented to Joan Hussey for her 80th Birthday, Henry Chadwick, ed. (Camberley: Porphyrogenitus, 1988):
118–119.
39. Oleg Grabar, “The Shared Culture of Objects, “Byzantine Court Culture from 829 to 1204,
Henry Maguire, ed. (Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Harvard University
Press, 997): 121. Anthony Cutler, “Gifts and exchanges as aspects of Byzantine, Arab and related
economies,” Byzantium in the Medieval World: Monetary Transactions and Exchange, Alice-Mary Talbot,
ed. (Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium 1999—Dumbarton Oaks Papers 55,
2001): 266.
Figure 2.8
Presentation with the title al-amir (220/MS329a).
The second unusual element is the inclusion of the title al-amir. Did this title,
which is not found on standard second Abbasid epoch coinage, carry an impor-
tance we have not noted before? As mentioned above, at the end of 324 Ibn Ra’iq
was awarded a new title and office, amir al-umara’, but it is possible that the sim-
pler title al-amir was also enhanced. In his discussion of Bajkam becoming amir
al-umara’ in Baghdad in the eleventh month of 326, Bates makes two important
observations: first, Bajkam was addressed by his kunya by the caliph, a point
I shall return to when discussing the coins of al-Ikhshid’s son and successor Abu-
l-Qasim Unujur, and second, at the time of his installation as amir al-umara’ the
Caliph al-Radi gave Bajkam seven robes of honor and a flag, and said “I name you
amir!”52 Earlier, during the reign of Ahmad ibn Tulun, Grabar noted that Ibn
Tulun’s administrative title of al-amir appeared on textiles and foundation
52. Ibid., 279 based upon Al-Suli, Akhbar al-Radi wa’l-Muttaki, J. Heyworth Dunne, ed. (London:
Luzac, 1935), 106–107.
The next presentation piece is dated 329 (Cat. 221/MS329a) and is also
unlike any other contemporary coin in terms of the inscriptions in both fields.
The obverse margin includes the date 329, but not the name of a mint, which,
again, was probably Egypt. The obverse can be translated as “Muhammad gains
victory through God.” The Muhammad in this case is probably Muhammad ibn
Tughj, but the ambiguity that it could also refer to the Prophet Muhammad
enhances the power of the sentence. The reverse margin is inscribed with the
short shahada “There is no deity except God; Muhammad is the Apostle of God.”
The center reverse margin can be translated as “Al-Ikhshid gives thanks to God.”
Neither phrase in the center of the obverse or reverse is found in the Qur’an
but both are clearly associated with some sort of victory. The struck piece com-
memorates something, probably a military victory but which one is unknown. It
53. Grabar, Coinage of the Tulunids, 39 and especially note on page 40 on the use of the title
al-amir.
54. Roy Mottahedeh, Loyalty and Leadership in an early Islamic Society (Princeton: Princeton Uni-
versity Press, 1980), 92–93.
55. Ibn Sa‘id, Al-Mughrib fi hula al-Magrib,12 ff. and reproduced in Al-Qalqashandi, Subh al-a‘sha
(Cairo: Dar al-Kutub, 1913) VII: 10 ff.
56. Bates, “Nobility,” 344–48.
57. Mohammad Abu’-l-Faraj al-Ush, Arab Islamic Coins preserved in the National Museum of Qatar
(Doha: The Ministry of Information in Qatar, 1984): 562; coin 2275 for Madinat al-Salam, 329, 558;
coin 2277 for Surra Man Ra (Samarra), 329.
58. Grabar, Coinage of the Tulunids.
59. The most detailed account of these political and military struggles is Ramzi J. Bikhazi, “The
Struggle for Syria and Mesopotamia (330–58/941–69) as Reflected on Hamdanid and Ikhshidid
Coins,” American Numismatic Society Museum Notes 28 (1983): 137–86.
60. Ibn Ra’iq had been active in Jordan before returning to Baghdad and, I believe, the dinar with
the mint name al-Urdunn and the date 329 was struck by his orders and was not an Ikhshidid piece as
suggested by Kazan. William Kazan, The Coinage of the Islamic Collection of William Kazan (Beirut:
Bank of Beirut, 1983): 242, cat. # 199.
61. A detailed account of developments in Baghdad along with the accompanying numismatic
material can be found in R. J. Bikhazi, “Hamdanid Coins of Madinat al-Salam H. 330–331,” Near East-
ern Numismatics, Iconography, Epigraphy and History. Studies in Honor of George C. Miles, Dickran Kou-
myjian, ed. (Beirut: American University in Beirut Press, 1974): 255–78.
62. Tests were run by Adon A. Gordus of the Department of Chemistry, the University of Michi-
gan for Ramzi Bikhazi. I am most grateful to the ANS for sharing the data. All the coins are from the
American Numismatic Society. For data on the purity of Hamdanid dirhams see Ramzi Bikhazi, “Ham-
danid Coins,” 255.
63. Gordus, “Non-Destructive Analysis,” 141–62.
64. Ibid.
65. Andrew Ehrenkreutz, “Monetary History of the Near East in the Middle Ages: The Standard of
Fineness of Some Types of Dinars,” JESHO II (1959): 128–61.
66. Ibid., 152.
Arabic sources write of a reform of the coinage in Baghdad in late 330. Bikhazi,
who studied the issue including testing the purity of Baghdad silver issues, con-
cluded that there was no reform of the dirham as stated in some Arab texts.71
In addition other chronicles, such as the anonymous account above, al-Suli and Ibn
al-Athir recorded that the reform only involved the improvement of the Hamdanid
dinar.72 Unfortunately appropriate dinars have not been available to test this claim,
and since Bikhazi’s tests demonstrate that the dirham was not debased, it is safest
to assume that the chroniclers were referring only to the gold issues.73
According to medieval Arabic sources, a debased dinar, which would have
been issued in the name of al-Muttaqi, was worth 10 dirhams while the reformed
Hamdanid dinar was worth 13.74 If the Baghdad dirham is assumed to be pure sil-
ver, the Hamdanid dinar is assumed to be 100% gold, and the gold/silver ratio
was the common 1:13 1/3 ratio, then the purity of debased al-Muttaqi dinars of
Baghdad would have been about 77%. Maintaining the same gold to silver ratio
but dropping the Hamdanid dinar to a purity of 98% and the silver to 90%, the
calculated percentage in a Baghdad al-Muttaqi dinar would be less than 75% gold.
Appropriate dinars from Baghdad still have to be tested to prove if the calculated
percentage of gold in surviving specimens reflects the data in the chronicle.
Figure 2.11
Hamdanid ‘ibriz’ dinar and the reverse of an Ikhshidid dinar without the term
Returning to the gold issues from Iraq, there is indirect evidence that the
Hamdanids did improve the fineness of their Baghdad dinars. The first is that they
inscribed the term ibriz on them, which implies a purified metal and was a public
statement about their new policy.75 Announcing an improvement and including a
word to that effect on the coinage is not proof. Since specific gravity tests on these
coins and their Iraqi predecessors have not been done, evidence from the surviv-
ing dinars is not available.
However, there is additional indirect evidence supporting the argument that
Hamdanid ibriz dinars were believed to be significantly better than other circulating
dinars. A hoard of 367 dinars was found in Ramla whose dates ranged from A.H.
143 to A.H. 368 with over half dating from 330 to 345.76 Ninety-seven of the dinars
in the hoard were Hamdanid Baghdad pieces dated 330 or 331 with the word ibriz
inscribed on them. This means that slightly more than 25% of all the dinars, which
included new Fatimid pieces with their high percentage of gold, were over thirty-
75. Bates discusses the term in greater detail. Bates, “Nobility,” 296–97.
76. Levy and Mitchell, “A Hoard of Gold Dinars from Ramlah.” INJ III (1965–66), 37–66.
Figure 2.12
Comparison of an Ikhshidid and a Fatimid dinar
The al-Mu‘izz dinar was composed of almost pure gold and its layout was
composed of a series of concentric circles. The radical differences between the
design of the second Abbasid dinars and the Fatimid dinars made it very easy to
distinguish the two. According to our narrative sources, after the original degree
was promulgated rejecting the use of al-Radi dinars in the new Fatimid state, we
77. Ibn Muyassar, Akhbar Misr, Annales d’Egypte (les khalifes Fatimides) text Arabe par m. Henri
Masse (Cairo: l’Institut Francais d’archeologie, 1919): 43, 45; al-Maqrizi, Khitat, 5–6.
78. Ibid.
82. Marius Canard. Histoire de la dynastie des H’amdanides de Jazira et de Syrie (Paris, Presses uni-
versitaires de France, 1953), 451.
83. The Caliph al-Mu‘tamid in 273 promised the Tulunid ruler Khumarawayh rule of Egypt and
Syria for 30 years. Zaky M. Hassan, Les Tulunides (Paris, Busson, 1933), 133.
84. Ibn Sa‘id, Al-Mughrib fi hula al-Magrib, 23.
There is another anomaly connected with the regular Ikhshidid coinage minted
in the name of the Abbasid caliph al-Mustakfi, which was struck in 334. The dinars
and dirhams lack a reference to his designated successor, which should have been
inscribed in the second position on the obverse field under the shahada although
Muhammad ibn Tughj’s laqab al-Ikhshid appears in the third position beneath the
caliph’s name. In theory, Ibn Tughj could have moved his laqab to the obverse
rather than leaving the space blank. The same was true for Hamdanid coinage for
334 in the name of al-Mustakfi. The simplest explanation is that the mint masters
in Ikhshidid and Hamdanid lands assumed that the caliph would designate a suc-
cessor as was the common practice and that persons kunya with or without his ism
would be inscribed in its proper place when news of the appointment arrived.85
The coinage for 334 also illustrates the dichotomy between the khutba and
the sikka. In Muharram 334, Tuzun died and the caliph issued coins in his own
name. He then gave himself a new laqab, ‘al-Imam al-Haqq,’ which he had
inscribed on his coinage.86 In fact the coinage for Baghdad for 334 is a mirror of
85. A Kufan dirham for 334 in the name of al-Mustakfi includes both the kunya and ism for his des-
ignated successor Abu’l-Hasan Muhammad. ‘Abd al-Rahman Fahmi, Mawsu‘at al-nuqud al-‘arabiya wa-
l-ilm al-nummiyat: I. Fajr al-sikkah al-‘arabiya. (Cairo: Dar al-Kutub, 1965). # 2691.
86. This is one of the relatively rare occasions in which a medieval source records the addition of
an inscription to the coinage. The Mamluk historian Ibn Taghri Birdi then goes on to mention the
Buyid laqabs and that these were also struck on the coinage (‘ala al-sikkah). Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum
al-zahira, III: 284–85.
87. For examples of all the coin types see Bikhazi, “Hamdanid Coinage.”
88. For examples of all the coin types see Bikhazi, “Struggle for Syria.”
89. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, III, 256. It is known that in 334 al-Ikhshid briefly occu-
pied Aleppo and that he had mentioned the deposition of the Caliph al-Mustakfi and the installation
of the caliph al-Muti‘. Ibn al-‘Adim, Ta’rikh Halab: 293.
Figure 2.14
Meccan dirham with the name of the Caliph al-Mustakfi (210a/MAS334a).
92. One of the pleasures of working in Islamic numismatics is the degree of camaraderie among col-
lectors, curators, dealers, and scholars. For example, another Ikhshidid piece was initially attributed to
Mecca and, now, through a series of friendly exchanges the consensus is that the coin was probably
struck in Egypt.
Although the quantity of the extant post-334 coinage is more than twice that for
Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid’s reign, a rapid survey of the inscriptions
appears to offer only limited data. There is only one caliph, al-Muti‘ li-llah (334–
63), and his name is inscribed on all the regular dinars and dirhams but without
designating a successor on the obverse. The standard layout of two marginal
inscriptions on the obverse and one on the reverse remains the same on dinars
and dirhams. The obverse field has the same version of the shahada as did the
other second Abbasid style coinage while in the reverse field, relatively minor
changes were added to the basic formula proclaiming Muhammad’s Prophethood.
It also appears that the established dates for the reigns of the Ikhshidid family are
also recorded on the coinage as given in the standard texts. A closer examination,
however, reveals a number of interesting issues that involve al-Ikhshid’s son Unu-
jur, his brother and suecessor ‘Ali, the famous eunuch Kafur, and leadership of the
family at the end of the dynasty.
Table 6
Reigns of Ikhshidid governors
Abu‘l-Qasim Unujur ibn Muhammad 334–349 946–960
Abu‘l-Hasan ‘Ali ibn Muhammad 349–355 960–966
Abu‘l-Musk Kafur al-Ikhshidi 355–357 966–968
Abu‘l-Fawaris Ahmad ibn ‘Ali (d. 377/987) 357–358 968–969
Abu Muhammad al-Hasan ibn ‘Ubayd (d. 371/982)
Allah, Regent for Ahmad
Table 7
Genealogical table of Ikhshidid family
Unujur’s Coinage1
The fact that the Caliph al-Muti‘ did not name a successor made space available
on the obverse below the shahada, which served as the second hierarchical posi-
tion after that of the caliph on both dinars and dirhams. It was here that the new
Ikhshidid governor placed his name, but what was unusual were the parts of Unu-
jur’s name inscribed on the coinage. Most important it was his kunya Abu-l-Qasim
and not his ism Unujur. In addition, when listing his nasab, he didn’t have Ibn
Muhammad inscribed but used his father’s laqab resulting in Abu-l-Qasim ibn al-
Ikhshid. This is not a trivial point, for as Bates has demonstrated in his study of
1. Some medieval and modern sources vocalize his name as Anujur. I have used the form Unujur,
which is also used by other medieval and modern authors.
From the second year of Unujur’s governorship, that is from 336, the reverse
of every regular dinar and dirham struck in Egypt and Palestine (Misr, Filastin,
and Tabariyya) were inscribed with the words wa ‘ala alihi (And upon his (The
Prophet’s) family) after salla Allah ‘alayhi (God’s blessing upon him), as illus-
trated in Figure 3.1. The new phrase was interpreted by Linder-Welin and Bikhazi
as a pro-Shi’i statement.4 To explain the inclusion of the new phrase, Bikhazi sug-
gested possible pro-Fatimid leanings by Kafur, who is identified as the power
behind the governor from the death of Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid, and by
other members of the Ikhshidid court.5 Following Kafur’s death in 357 when the
Ikhshidids were fighting Fatimids, the phrase was still retained on the coinage
implying, at least, that whatever original meaning it may have carried, twenty years
earlier, by then it was assumed to be part of a ‘regular’ inscription without specific
meaning. While Bikhazi makes an effective case that the Ikhshidids until the death
of Kafur worked out an understanding with the Fatimids, there may be another
explanation for the introduction of the new phrase wa ‘ala alihi.
The earliest appearance in that era of these words is on Hamdanid coinage
minted in Aleppo from 334 where Sayf al-Dawla ruled the city. Bikhazi argued
4. U. Linder-Welin, “Sayf al-Dawlah’s Reign in Syria in Syria Diyarbekr in the Light of the Numis-
matic Evidence,” Commentationes de Nummis Saeculorum IX–XI in Suecia Repertic (Stockholm, 1961):
52; Bikhazi, “Hamdanid Dynasty,” 68–76; and Bikhazi, “Struggle for Syria,” 163.
5. Linder-Welin, ibid. Bikhazi, “Struggle for Syria,” Ibid., 163–69.
6. Ibid., 169.
7. A systematic investigation of when and where the phrase appeared on Buyid and Fatimid coinage
is needed. Such a study will be possible with Luke Treadwell, Buyid Coins, and Norman D. Nicol,
A corpus of Fatimid Coins (Trieste: G. Benardi, 2005).
8. Thierry Bianquis, “Sayf al-Dawla,” Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed., IX: 103–110. Ramzi Jibran
Bikhazi, “The Hamdanid Dynasty of Mesopotamia and North Syria 254–404/868–1014,” Unpub-
lished Ph.D. dissertation (The University of Michigan, 1981): 616–21
9. The case for the importance of Palestine for al-Ikhshid is made in Bacharach, “Career of Muham-
mad ibn Tughj.”
10. Ibid., 169.
11. The best survey for these events and the related numismatic material is Bikhazi, “Struggle for
Syria.”
12. Cat. 187/HAS336a.
13. The early 330s Damascus issues from the reign of al-Ikhshid also appear to be related to the var-
ious military campaigns undertaken by al-Ikhshid and later by Kafur and are also a product of Ikhshi-
did/Hamdanid warfare. Details can be found in Bacharach, “Al-Ikhshid, the Hamdanids and the
Caliphate: The Numismatic Evidence,” JAOS 94 (1974): 360–70; and Bikhazi, “Struggle for Syria.”
pattern, that is, the number of dinars struck in Misr overwhelmed those minted in
Filastin for these years. Even taking into consideration the possible skewing of our
sample because of the vast number of Egyptian dinars found in the Asyut hoard,
presented in the preceding table, many of which have entered the coin market, the
existing gold specimens minted in Egypt far outnumber those struck in Palestine.14
Unfortunately, the textual sources do not give a clear indication of why pro-
duction of dinars from the Egyptian mint was so high for these years. What makes
this pattern even more intriguing is that for the years 345 and 346 no dinars with
a Misr mint name have been recorded and then the center for dinar production
shifts to Palestine until the end of the dynasty as illustrated in the following graph
based on data in the catalogue in the second half of this book.
The Arabic texts refer to some economic problems in Egypt and an earth-
quake in the mid-340s in Egypt but how that would have affected mint produc-
tion is not clear. Since, the Ramla mint always had to import its gold bullion, the
answer is not related to Palestine’s natural assets. Perhaps, enough Egyptian
dinars flooded the Fustat market through 344 and there was no need for addi-
tional Egyptian gold coins. I believe this is unlikely. On the contrary, both the
appearance of the isolated kaf of Kafur and the emergence of the Ramla mint as
the center of dinar production appear to be related to the consolidation of Kafur’s
power in Ikhshidid Egypt and the relative loss of power of Unujur, the official gov-
ernor of these lands. Unfortunately, I am unaware of any appropriate narrative
data to prove my interpretation.
14. Paul Balog, “Dinars ikhchidites trouves a Assiout (Haute-Egypte) en automne 1954,” Revue
belge de Numismatique 111 (1955): 103–111.
Figure 3.2
Medallion in the name of Abu-l-Qasim Unujur (224/Medallion).
15. Michael Bates, “Numismatics,” Fustat Expedition Find Report. Vol. 2: Fustat—C. American
Research Center in Egypt Report Vol. 11. Wlaydyslaw Kubiak and George T. Scanlon, eds. (Winona
Lake, Minn., 1989): 62–63. British Museum. Coin Room # 87.1.2.1 (22, 3.62).
16. Bikhazi, “Struggle for Syria,” 153.
17. Ibid. A second, but less likely interpretation is that the medallion commemorated the quelling
of the rebellion of Ghalbun, subgovernor of the Rif area of Egypt and his subsequent death in Dhu-l-
Hijja, 336. Although the latter event took place in Egypt, it was Unujur’s uncle Abu’-l-Muthaffar al-
Hasan ibn Tughj who defeated Ghabun as Unujur was on his way back from Palestine at the time. Al-
Kindi, Governors and Judges of Egypt, 312. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, III: 292.
18. Karel Otavsky and Muhammad ‘Abbas Muhammad Salim, Mittelalterliche Textilien I: Agypten,
Persien und Mesopotamien, Spanien und Nordafrika (Riggisberg: Abegg-Stiftung, 1995): Cat. 11
(40–41).
19. Jochen A. Sokoly. “Tiraz Textiles from Egypt: Production, Administration and Uses of Tiraz
Textiles from Egypt under the Umayyad, Abbasid and Fatimid Dynasties,” Unpublished Ph.D. disserta-
tion (Oxford University, 2001).
20. Ibid., Cat. 913 from the Museum of Islamic Art, Cairo, #14781.
Figure 3.3
Presentation piece in the name of Abu-l-Qasim Unujur (223/FS348).
Figure 3.4
Coins of Abu-l-Qasim Unujur without and with a kaf.
Al-Ustadh Abu’l-Musk Kafur ibn Abd Allah al-Ikhshidi, the eunuch, the Black, the
Abyssinian, is ruler of Egypt, Syria, and the Thughur. His master Abu Bakr Muham-
mad al-Ikhshid bought him from the sellers of oil for eighteen dinars.
23. One school of thought argues that Kafur held real power from 335. Ibn al-‘Asakir, Ta’rikh Madi-
nah Dimashq (Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1998), Vol. 5: 4–5. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV. 1. Al-
Massisah, Ta’rikh, fol. I60v. Kashif, Misr, 125. Another possibility is 337 by which time an agreement
was reached between Kafur and Sayf al-Dawla. Bikhazi, “Hamdanid Dynasty,” 621. Ibn al-Dawadari
suggests that in 340 following an earthquake Kafur consolidated his power. Ibn al-Dawadari, V: 296.
24. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV, 1. This was considered a very low price.
Figure 3.6
Obverse of a dinar from the governorship of Kafur.
26. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV: 2. Kashif, Misr, 125 Andrew S. Ehrenkreutz observed
that in addition to not asserting the right of sikka, which he had the power to do, Kafur did not have
his name included on the tiraz. Ehrenkreutz, “Kafur,” EI 2nd ed., IV: 418.
27. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV 2.
28. I know of no catalogue arranged by dynasty, which lists these coins, which are standard second
Abbasid epoch coins with only the caliph’s name and no governor, under the Abbasid Caliph al-Muti‘.
Modern collectors, curators, and scholars all understand that this kaf is for Kafur and therefore list this
coinage under the Ikhshidids. In contrast, these same scholars place coins from the reign of al-Radi
with isolated letters and no inscribed governor’s name which were minted in Ikhshidid Egypt under
the caliph al-Radi.
29. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV: 9.
30. The first example in the sylloge is from Baysh, dated 331. Ibid., plate I and accompanying text.
The verse reads in translation, “The Truth has now come and falsehood has withdrawn away; for
behold, all falsehood is bound to wither away.” The verse is also common on early Maghribi silver coin-
age including early Kharajite and Idrisid issues. Stephen Album. Private Correspondence. June 1989.
Figure 3.8
Meccan coin of 357 in the name of Kafur (211/MAG357a).
31. Album, SICA 10: viii. C.E. Bosworth, The New Islamic Dynasties (Edinburgh: Edinburgh Uni-
versity Press, 1996): 99.
32. Henry C. Kay, trans. Omarah’s History of Yaman (London, 1892): 6–8.
33. Album. SICA 10: ix and Plates 17–19 for numerous examples.
34. Kay, Omarah’s History of Yaman, 8.
The inscriptions are unusual for the data inscribed. Kafur was known as al-
Ustadh, according to the medieval chronicles, but this nisba only appeared on the
Meccan pieces discussed above and never on the regular coinage of Egypt and Pales-
tine. Medieval historians such as Ibn Taghri Birdi give Kafur’s kunya as Abu’-l-Musk,
which is not the one inscribed on two copper pieces.39 This raises the possibility that
the authorizer of these copper pieces was outside Ikhshidid lands and did not know
Kafur’s real kunya or that Kafur was a eunuch, or wanted to use a more positive
kunya than “Father of Whiteness (musk).”. The use of the kunya Abu Muhammad
was a statistically safe choice. As for the titles associated with Ali ibn al-Ikhshid, every-
thing is unusual about them. He is listed on this copper coin as “al-Amir,” a title he
held but one that never appeared on his regular dinars and dirhams. His kunya Abu’l-
Hasan is also accurate but this part of his full name was never inscribed on the sec-
ond Abbasid epoch style dinars and dirhams of Egypt and Palestine, although it
appeared on a textile, as noted above under the discussion of the Ikhshidid medal-
lion. Since all dinars and dirhams from Egypt and Palestine minted in the name of
Ali ibn al-Ikhshid included his ism-nasab Ali ibn al-Ikhshid, the caliph’s laqab, that is
38. Fahmi, Fajr al-sikkah al-‘arabiya, #3045; and A. Markoff, Inventarnii Katalog Musulmanskikh
Monet. (St. Petersbourg: Imperatorskavo Ermitazha, 1896–1898), 347 #7.
39. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV, 1.
40. Ibid.
41. Grabar, Coinage of the Tulunids, 31. For other dates see Mentzel, “Coins: Tulunid,” in Fustat
Finds, Jere L. Bacharach, ed. (Cairo: AUC Press, 2002): 57–58.
42. Mayssa Mahmoud Daoud, Archaeological and Artistic Study of the Fatimid Numismatic Set at the
Museum of Ishmic Art in Cairo. (Cairo, 1991). No. 133, 237; Weight: 3.25 gm.; Diameter: 17 cm.
43. Album, personal correspondence, 9 June 1989.
44. George C. Miles, “Islamic coins from the Tarsus Excavations of 1935–37,” in The Aegean and
the Near East, Studies Presented to Hetty Goldman, S. S. Weinberg, ed. (Locust Valley, N.Y.: J. J. Augus-
tin, 1956): 297–312.
45. Stern, “The Coins of Thamal and of Other Governors of Tarsus,” JAOS 80 (1960): 223–24.
46. Ibn Miskawayh, Tajarib al-umam, F. H. Amedroz and D. S. Margoliouth, eds. (Oxford: Black-
well, 1920–21): II, 192; and Anonymous, Kitab al-‘uyun: IV: 506–508.
47. The anonymous author of Kitab al-‘uyun gives his name as Abu al-Hasan ibn Rashiq al-Nasimi.
It is possible that the ibn was recorded in error as all the other sources list him as Rashiq. Ibid., 508.
48. Bikhazi, “Hamdanid Dynasty,” 58–63 and 917–42.
49. C. Edmund Bosworth, “Abu Amr ‘Uthman’s al-Tarsusi’s Siyar al-Thughur and the Last Years of
Arab Rule in Tarsus (Fourth/Tenth Century), Graeco-Arabica 5 (1993): 194.
50. Ibn Miskawayh, Tajarib al-umam, II, 214; and Ibn al-‘Adim, Ta’rikh Halab, Suhayl Zukar, ed.
(Damascus, 1988): I: 148. Michael Bonner relates a moving story of how when the last Friday khutba
was to be given in Tarsus, the dignitary who has been asked to give the sermon declined, not wishing
to be the last preacher. Then, a man named Abu Dharr, a native of Tarsus who had been absent for
some time, gave the khutba in the name of the caliph al-Mu’tadid, who by this time had been dead for
six decades implying that no caliph had been worthy of the name since his death in 289/902. Michael
Bonner, Aristocratic Violence and Holy War: Studies in the Jihad and the Arab-Byzantine Frontier (New
Haven: American Oriental Society, 1996): 155.
51. Canard, Les H’amdanides, 823
52. Ibn Miskawayh, Tajarib al-umam, II, 210.
53. Canard. Les H’amdanides, 823.
54. Ibn Miskawayh, Tajarib al-umam, II, 210.
55. Ibid.
56. In the account of the arrival of the Egyptian fleet by Miskawaihi [Miskawayh??], his name is
given as “tbh,” but that could be an easy mistake for “fth.” Ibn al-‘Adim gives his nisba as al-aymaki or
al-thamali, again easy spelling errors for a manuscript copyist to make. Therefore, it is best to accept
Fath al-Thamali as his name. Ibn Miskawayh, Tajarib al-umam, II, 211, note 1; and Ibn al-‘Adim, Ta’r-
ikh Halab, I, 148.
57. Stern, “Coins of Thamal,” 223.
58. Ibn Miskawayh, Tajarib al-umam, II, 211, note 1; and Ibn al-‘Adim, Ta’rikh Halab, I, 148.
59. Ibn Taghri Birdi, Al-Nujum al-zahira, IV, 9; and Anonymous, Ta’rikh Dawla, fol. 165b.
60. Since the specimen includes the name of the reigning Ikhshidid Ali ibn al-Ikhshid and no coins
have been found in his name dared 355, it is most likely that this piece was struck in 353. See Ilisch,
SNAT IVa, Cat. 138.
The last coins of the Ikhshidid dynasty beginning with 357 continued the classical
pattern of second Abbasid epoch coinage and, in terms of the market, looked right.
But, a closer examination of the numismatic evidence reveals interesting develop-
ments. When Kafur died, his official successor was Ahmad, the eleven-year old son of
Ali. Thus the ism-nasab combination Ahmad ibn Ali is inscribed on the coinage as
would have been predicted. On many of these late Ikhshidid specimens, the ism
Tughj is inscribed below Ahmad ibn ‘Ali’s name. This is the name of Ahmad’s great
grandfather. But, if Ahmad really wanted to inscribe a prestigious name on his coin-
age, he would have listed his grandfather Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid in which
case the coin would have read Ahmad ibn Ali ibn al-Ikhshid. But what if Ahmad did
not control what was inscribed and, instead, it was another member of the family
who was descended from Tughj but not from Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid?
According to the narrative accounts, Ahmad’s name was mentioned in the Fri-
day khutba from the pulpits of Egypt (Misr), Palestine, parts of Syria (al-Sham), and
the Holy Cities of Mecca and Medina (al-Haramayn,) indicating that he was the
legally caliphal recognized leader.63 Unfortunately for him Egypt was facing
64. A number of medieval sources and some modern scholars including myself listed his ism as al-
Husayn, but a careful reading of the numismatic material and checking a larger body of medieval texts
makes it clear that it was al-Hasan. An example of the confusion surrounding his name is the edition of
Ibn al-Dawadari’s chronicle. The editor wrote his name as al-Husayn ibn ‘Ubayd Allah on one line and
two lines later changed it to al-Hasan ibn ‘Ubayd Allah! Ibn al-Dawadari, Die Chronik des Ibn al-Dawa-
dari., V: 413.
65. Ilisch, reflecting the priority of rankings places al-Hasan’s name before that of Ahmad in his
catalogue. Ilisch, SNAT IVa, 18.
66. In the accompanying catalogue there is a reference to one dinar, dated 358, minted in Misr
(Cat. 105/MG358a) based upon a letter from Dr. Paul Balog. I have neither examined the piece nor
have I seen a photograph of it. It is possible that dinars and even dirhams were minted in Misr at this
time but relative to the production at the Filastin mint and even the number of dirhams from Tabariya,
their output must have been very small, if there were any. In contrast, the quantity of Fatimid gold and
silver coins of Misr dated 358 was quite large, based upon the existing specimens listed in Nicoi’s Cor-
pus of Fatimid Coins.
67. Ilisch, SNAT IVa, cat. 143–7.
68. For a summary of his life see al-Maqrizi, Kitab al-muqaffa al-kabir, 345–46.
Figure 3.11
Qarmatian coin with an al-Hasan as a governor.
Then, al-Hasan had to battle a new Qarmatian army, which invaded Palestine
in the last month of 358/October 969. The Ikhshidids were once again defeated
and this time they promised to pay the Qarmatians an annual tribute of 300,000
69. The most important Arabic source for Palestine during this period is Yahya Ibn Sa‘id d’An-
tioche, Kitab al-dhail, ed. and trans. I. Kratchkovsky and A. Vasiliev (Paris: Patrologia Orientalis XVIII,
1924): 817–18.
70. Ilisch, SNAT IVa, 150–51.
General Observations
Historical studies are undergoing important changes as more and more scholars
turn to the material cultural remains of the societies they study. Historians were
traditionally trained to rely almost exclusively on documents written on paper,
which I have referred to as narrative sources. For those who have studied the pre-
Ottoman Islamic Middle East, chronicles were considered the most important of
these texts. Over time additional written texts were added to the range of pub-
lished books and manuscripts used by scholars. These included endowment deeds
(waqf) or, as in the case of S.D. Goitein and his disciples, small pieces of discarded
scraps of paper, which constituted the Geniza documents.1 Material culture in the
form of buildings with their attendant inscriptions, textiles, and ceramics were
mostly considered the purview of art and architectural historians.
A plea for the value of numismatic material was made by Treadwell. He wrote
that “coins can yield their full benefit to the historian, if they are interpreted, not
as disembodied and decontextualized objects, but in light of the narrative pro-
vided by contemporary historians.”2 Unfortunately numismatic evidence has
rarely, with few exceptions, been used in this manner. The most important of
1. S.D. Goitein. A Mediterranean Society: the Jewish communities of the Arab world as portrayed in the
documents of the Cairo Geniza (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967–1993). 6 vols.
2. Luke Treadwell, “Shahanshah and al-Malik al-Mu’ayyad: The Legitimization of Power in Sama-
nid and Buyid Iran,” Culture and Memory in Medieval Islam: Essays in Honour of Wilfred Madelung, Far-
had Daftary and Joseph W. Meri, eds. (London: I.B. Taurus, 2003): 319.
these cases involved an analysis of the Dome of the Rock.3 This study has sought
to fulfill Treadwell’s call and push the limits of this type of material evidence by
examining the whole numismatic record of the Ikhshidids, a minor Muslim
dynasty, which ruled Egypt, Palestine, and parts of Syria for approximately thirty-
five years.
An underlying assumption in using Islamic numismatic data is that when
coins—that is, regular dinars and dirhams—are inscribed with the name of a par-
ticular local ruler for a specific mint/date combination, that ruler really controlled
the mint city during part, if not all, of that Muslim year and was ultimately respon-
sible for what was inscribed on the coins. For the years the Ikhshidids were active,
numismatic data are often explained in light of known historic events such as the
taking and retaking of Damascus, Horns, and Aleppo in the 330s by Hamdanids
and Ikhshidids. The coinage is treated as reflecting facts already known from nar-
rative texts.4
There are other time periods and regions for which numismatics can play a
very important role in reconstructing political and military events but the Ikhshi-
did era is not one of them. A few new ‘facts’ were uncovered by a close examina-
tion of the numismatic evidence such as the role of al-Hasan ibn ‘Ubayd Allah,
the last effective Ikhshidid military leader. The coinage demonstrates that,
although the chronicles list the nominal Ikhshidid governor Ahmad b. Ali as the
ruler, the placement of al-Hasan ibn Ubayd Allah’s name on the coinage in the
second most important position, after that of the caliph, proves he was the real
ruler. The coinage could also be used to argued that the Ikhshidid dynasty should
be listed as ending in 359 rather than 358 when Egypt fell to the Fatimids because
3. The classic study using early numismatic material is Oleg Grabar, The Formation of Islamic Art
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1973; 2nd ed. 1987). A more recent work incorporating numis-
matic evidence for the same period is Jeremy Johns, “Archaeology and the History of Early Islam,
“JESHO 46 (2003): 411–36. A very important study for the Ikhshidid-Hamdanid period where both
texts and coins are used is Bikhazi, “Struggle for Syria.” Students of Mamluk numismatics have often
combined numismatic and textual evidence and references to works by Meloy, Shoshan, and particu-
larly Schultz can be found at www.lib.uchicago.edu/LibInfo/SourcesBySubject/MiddleEat/MamBib.
html, where they are listed under the numismatic section. On the other hand, Blair did not include
numismatic evidence in her important study of Islamic inscriptions but called for a separate study of
inscriptions on coins, paper, and other media, see Sheila S. Blair, Islamic Inscriptions (Edinburgh: Uni-
versity of Edinburgh Press, 1998): 15. James A. Allan has incorporated numismatic evidence with art
historical data from metalwork in order to demonstrate the continuity of styles and designs beyond the
life of a particular dynasty, in this case the Fatimids. James A. Allan, “‘My Father is a Sun and I am the
Star.’ Fatimid Symbols in Ayyubid and Mamluk Metalwork,” Journal of the David Collection I (2003):
25–48.
4. Bikhaz, Ibid, 180: coins 139–42.
98 Conclusion
a dated dinar from Filastin in the name of the family was minted, but this is not a
significant finding. Qarmatian dirhams minted in Tabariyya for 359 identify the
same al-Hasan as governor, but, here numismatic evidence revealed how his posi-
tion had become subordinate to these Shi‘ite rulers in the third position beneath
that of the Abbasid caliph.
In preparing a study based upon coinage, the first issue is to determine what
numismatic material to include. One approach is to organize specimens by region
and then mint irrespective of dynastic developments. The Islamic coins in the
cabinets of the American Numismatic Society and the sylloge published by the
T€ubingen follow this system.5 In these two examples, geography is the most
important variant. This type of organization makes it very easy to study the
change in numismatic data over time in a specific region or at a single mint. This
approach stresses the vertical component, that is, time.
The second and older approach focuses on dynastic developments and
emphasizes the horizontal (space). Using space as the critical factor, when more
and more mints come under the control of a dynasty, their production is added;
when the dynasty loses control of these mint towns, coinage in the name of
another political power in that same mint city is not included. Most catalogues of
Islamic coins organize their material by dynasty such as Umayyad, Fatimid, Ayyu-
bid, and Mamluk where there is a one-to-one correlation between the inclusion of
the dynastic leader’s name on the coinage and their having control over a specific
region such as Egypt.
The situation was more complex during the Abbasid caliphate, particularly for
the second Abbasid epoch, 218–334/833–946. Some families whom we label
dynasties, such as Buyids, Hamdanids, Ikhshidids, and Tulunids, held varying
degrees of independence from the Abbasid caliphs, while in reality, they con-
trolled the mint cities in the regions they governed. If coinage from lands con-
trolled by any of these dynasties included inscriptions associated with that family
such as the name Ahmad ibn Tulun, modern scholars listed that coinage under
the dynasty’s name, which in this case would be Tulunid. Coins struck at the same
mint, which was controlled by the same ruler but did not include his ism or any
5. Most of the Sylloge of the Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean Museum will follow a geographical
approach but not entirely. While coins minted in Egypt and Palestine with the names of Tulunid and
Ikhshidid rulers will be included in Volume 6, dinars and dirhams without the names of governors for
these years but from these mints will be listed under the name of the appropriate Abbasid caliph in vol-
ume 4, see Norman D. Nicol, Sylloge of Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean Vol. 4: Later Abbasid precious
metal coinage (from 219 AH), (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2012). Nicol, Sylloge of Islamic Coins in
the Ashmolean Vol. 6: The Egyptian Dynasties (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2007).
Conclusion 99
other part of his name, were listed in catalogues as Abbasid coinage. Therefore
the determining factor for where the coin was listed in coin a catalogue was whose
name was inscribed on the gold and silver, not the actual ruler who controlled the
city in which the coins were struck.
Therefore, earlier numismatic studies of Ikhshidid coinage and general cata-
logues of Islamic coins begin their ‘Ikhshidid’ sections with the earliest year in
which Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid began to mint coins with al-Ikhshid’
inscribed on the specimens. But what about coins struck by these same mints ear-
lier, which did not include inscriptions tying the coinage to Muhammad ibn
Tughj, although the same governor controlled them? My approach has been to
assume that the Ikhshidids controlled Egypt and Palestine from 324, if not part of
323, until 359. Therefore for this study, I have included the following: all numis-
matic evidence for these years from the mints of Misr, Filastin, and Tabariyya
unless the coins had a specific association with other military powers and dirhams
minted in Damascus, Horns, and Aleppo if they included specific references to
Ikhshidid rulers. However, coins from these last three mints with a clear reference
to other political powers or to no one other than the Abbasid caliph were
excluded. What the data in the catalogue cannot be used for is reconstructing the
political and military history of Greater Syria from 323 to 359 because not all the
relevant numismatic data for all the regional mints are included.6
My approach also means that the Ikhshidids are responsible for the inscrip-
tions on the coins. One of the major findings of this study is that not all numis-
matic data are alike. The numismatic material for this era must be subdivided into
regular coinage, which I have labeled “coins” and other coinage. By the former
I mean the dinars and dirhams, which followed the model established in the
third/ninth century by the Abbasid caliph al-Ma’mun and his immediate succes-
sors as detailed at the end of the first chapter. For the latter, I included the copper
coins (fulus), Meccan issues, which conformed to a different basic layout, and,
most important of all, presentation pieces.
Gold and silver coins from the second Abbasid monetary epoch have many
elements in common.7 All dinars and dirhams have the same marginal and pri-
mary field inscriptions in the same place irrespective of metal, mint, or date. The
laqab or caliphal reign name is always inscribed below the basic reverse inscrip-
tion. Whoever is considered the next important person to be identified on the
6. For an example where numismatic data from a single mint over time are used to reconstruct mili-
tary and political history, see R. J. Bikhazi, “Hamdanid Coins.”
7. This generalization excludes the obvious changes necessitated in identifying the piece as a dinar
or dirham, the name of the mint, and the Muslim year.
100 Conclusion
coinage such as a successor to the caliph or a governor is named beneath the basic
field inscription on the obverse in second position. The name of the person in the
third hierarchical position appears below that of the caliph’s, while the fourth per-
son, if one is inscribed, is placed below the second position name on the obverse.
While the unwritten rules governing the placement of names on second
epoch Abbasid coinage broke down after the 340s in Buyid controlled Abbasid
lands, this is not true for Ikhshidid mint production.8 Ikhshidid dinars and dir-
hams followed the established rules to the end of their dynasty. It is only with the
Fatimid conquests of Egypt and then Palestine that a century old Abbasid mone-
tary program involving a hierarchy based on the location of one’s name on the
coinage from these lands ends.
Another basic premise is that the ruling Ikhshidid, which includes Kafur, is
the final authority for what wording was inscribed on the coinage. This premise
also applies to what percentage of gold or silver used in the dinars, dirhams, and
presentation pieces. Tests on the purity of the Ikhshidid dirhams established that
they were composed of a high degree of silver. The limited data do not indicate
any significant debasements. Tests on the purity of dinars, on the other hand, pro-
duced very different results. The data verify that Muhammad ibn Tughj systemati-
cally debased his gold coinage through the caliphates of al-Radi and al-Muttaqi.
Textual references, which now can be understood in light of the numismatic data,
prove that his contemporaries knew this as well. With the introduction of high
quality dinars by the Hamdanids in Baghdad, al-Ikhshid reversed his earlier policy
and began minting dinars with a high degree of purity.
The Hamdanids placed their new laqabs on the dinars and dirhams from
mints they controlled and, in the case of dinars, added the word ibriz affirming
the gold coin’s high degree of purity. In response to Hamdanid actions, both in
terms of the inclusion of their laqabs and their reform of the dinar, Muhammad
ibn Tughj put his laqab ‘al-Ikhshid’ on Egyptian and Palestinian dinars and dir-
hams and improved the quality of Ikhshidid dinars. Ibn Tughj’s successors also
placed their ‘names’ on the coinage and maintained high quality dinars. By includ-
ing all dinars from the time Muhammad ibn Tughj took control of Egypt and Pal-
estine in 323, it is possible, first, to document his policy of debasing the gold
issues and then to determine the date when a fundamental shift took place in his
monetary policy, which was also signaled by the inclusion of his laqab on the
coinage.
Conclusion 101
Collectors and curators seek breadth rather than depth for their coin holdings.
Both wish to have at least one specimen for each type, which usually means one
example of each unique combination of metal-mint-date-ruler-inscription. While
it is easier and significantly cheaper to acquire large numbers of coins with the
same metal-mint-date-ruler-inscription combination because of their relative
abundance in the coin market, the reality is that the goal of collectors and muse-
ums is to fill in missing combinations rather than acquire duplicates.’9 The advant-
age for the scholar of this collector/curator bias is that an accumulation of data
from all these numismatic sources will give a better picture of the range of possi-
ble coin types. Pieces with uncommon inscriptions, rare mints or dates, or other
unusual characteristics will appear in these collections while such numismatic
pieces may have circulated only in small quantities in medieval times.
Hoards are the best source for understanding circulation, but only if found in
situ. Dealers knowing the nature of the coin market tend to cream the better
pieces for preferred clients once the hoard reaches their hands while worn items
may be discarded as having little market value. This, also, leads to the loss of val-
uable information. For example, although the Asyut hoard described by Balog is
extremely important as it included so many Egyptian Ikhshidid dinars, we don’t
know its actual composition and must use his findings with caution.10 On the
other hand, the hoards from Ramla and Tel Ashdod were found under controlled
circumstances and their description includes all specimens.11
The last two hoards indicate that there was a fairly wide range of dynasty/
mint/date combinations of either dinars or dirhams circulating together at the
same time. In the case of the Ramla hoard of gold coins, it is clear that Hamdanid
dinars inscribed with the word ibriz, which were over three decades old when the
hoard was ‘lost,’ were more highly valued than other dinars because of a belief in
their high degree of purity. This is an example of the importance of Reputation
for a coinage. The Tel Ashdod find reflects the pressures of paying for troops
where even blank flans became part of the accumulated hoard. The original crea-
tor of the Tel Ashdod material needed money and appears to have been willing to
102 Conclusion
accept blank flans since their importance was not in their dynastic identity or reli-
gious message, but in the value of their silver. In contrast, modern scholars and
collectors carefully distinguish Shi‘ite Qarmatian, Shi‘ite Fatimid, Sunni Abbasid,
Sunni Ikhshidid, and Christian Byzantine pieces from one another, all of which
can be found in the Tel Ashdod hoard.
Data derived from distribution charts created from the weights of extant Ikh-
shidid coins by time and place must also be used with great caution. Listing all the
weights as a function of metal and mint over time may suggest that for some
mints for some years, the weights of individual dinars and dirhams varied more
than for other years and that the ‘average’ weight went up or down. But, was that
important to those who used the coinage? The only safe conclusion is that any
significant transaction involving second epoch Abbasid dinars or dirhams had to
be done by weight. There was no time during the Ikhshidid era that dinars or dir-
hams were struck so close to a set standard that transactions by number could
have been made with the confidence that the number of coins and the theoretical
weight of canonical issues were the same.
Using the number of existing coins based on metal and mint over time to
draw conclusions about absolute mint production is distorted by the same biases.
This means that private and public collections do not reflect the reality of the
medieval market place because each museum or private holding has sought only
one specimen of each type. But with a large enough sample, as reflected in the
accompanying catalogue, it is possible to speculate on production trends. For
example, I found that Ikhshidid dinars were minted in Palestine from the mid-
340s while none have appeared with the Egyptian mint name for the same chro-
nological period. A single coin for any metal-mint-date combination such as gold-
Misr-350s may be found but its rarity in relative terms still permits drawing con-
clusions about general trends. I am confident that the production of dinars in
Ramla (Filastin) for these years was significantly greater than that of Fustat
(Misr). It appears that the switch from Egypt to Palestine in terms of dinar pro-
duction coincides with the appearance of Kafur’s kaf on the coinage, but it doesn’t
answer why it took place.
Studying Ikhshidid dinars and dirhams as part of a larger world in which simi-
lar style gold and silver circulated allows mapping monetary zones based upon
the visual layout of the coinage.12 The coinage of Egypt and Syria were not just
Muslim, but were visually tied to the Abbasid caliphate and Sunni Islam.
12. For a contemporary parallel Treadwell has concluded that Buyid coins could be grouped in four
monetary zones. Treadwell, Buyid Coins, xii–xiv.
Conclusion 103
Whatever the reasons the Fatimid Caliph-Imam al-Mu’izz had his coins minted
with the inscriptions in a series of concentric circles, they carried a clear visual
message that they were different from second Abbasid Sunni style issue.13 More
subtle was the emergence of a different layout for the dinars and dirhams of West-
ern Arabia where coinage in the 330s to 350s was neither second Abbasid epoch
nor concentric circle Fatimid in style. Having identified this third monetary zone,
it is also possible to speculate that the rules governing what could and could not
be inscribed on second Abbasid epoch pieces or Fatimid concentric specimens
did not apply. The coins minted in Mecca with Kafur’s name, which never
appeared on the dinars and dirhams of Egypt and Palestine, reflect political devel-
opments in the Hijaz during the 350s and the fact that the rules for what could be
inscribed were different. Understanding what was inscribed and the reasons why
must focus on developments in the Hijaz, not Egypt and Palestine.
Copper currency was almost non-existent in Ikhshidid lands and the appear-
ance of a few examples reflected other issues. Perhaps the one cut in the shape of
a square served as small change or a weight for a scale. Visually, it was impossible
to confuse this piece with regular coins. The other copper piece was a medieval
forgery whose creator using a dinar as a die, hoped to make a profit by coating the
copper piece with a gold wash. The one important copper type, which was minted
in the names of Kafur and the Ikhshidid governor Ali was unlike any Syrian or
Egyptian issue and must have been struck outside Ikhshidid lands, probably in
Tarsus. The inscriptions in terms of the names used for both Kafur and Ali broke
every rule for second Abbasid coinage except that as a copper piece minted out-
side this monetary zone, the same rules did not apply. The best explanation is that
the coin reflected the attempt of local rulers in the frontier zone between Byzan-
tium and the Islamic world to seek military aid from the Ikhshidid rulers when
their closest Muslim power, the Hamdanids, were unable or unwilling to supply
it. This is a case, as illustrated in the preceding chapter, where a careful examina-
tion of Arabic texts was needed to offer an interpretation of why and when the
coin was struck.
‘Presentation piece’ is a catchall for all other numismatic evidence.14 For this
study, the term included gold and silver pieces, which did not conform to the
rules governing second Abbasid epoch coinage. These pieces included those with
13. Bierman, Writing Signs, 62–70; and “Inscribing the City,” 105–14.
14. The fullest treatment of presentation pieces is Lutz Ilisch, “Mungzeschenke und Geschenkmun-
zen in der mittelalterlichen islmaischen Welt,” MNZXIV, 2 (Juni 1984): 7–12; XIV, 3 (September
1984): 15–24; XIV, 3 (Dezember 1984): 27–34; XV, 1 (April, 1985): 5–12. The three additional
pieces from the Ikhshidid era can be found in his unpublished M.A. Thesis, 63–65.
104 Conclusion
unusual inscriptions and were usually smaller than standard coins. In this sense
the Ikhshidid medallion was just another example of a presentation piece.
I assume that presentation pieces were used as gifts to members of the Ikhshidid
or Abbasid court. It is also my assumption that once a presentation piece was
struck and presented, the specific connotation of its inscription or design was
quickly forgotten and the money markets and merchants treated the presentation
piece as a form of circulating stamped money whose value was dependent on its
weight and assumed fineness. Thus the striking of the medallion may have been
associated with a specific military victory by Abu-l-Qasim Unujur, but the last
owner of one specimen, probably, retained it as a circulating coin when he lost it
in a medieval bathroom without any idea why it was issued.
A careful examination of all dinars and dirhams as well as the presentation
pieces associated with Ikhshidid rule make it clear that what part of a name used
on a coin was highly significant. The English word ‘name’ hides the complexity of
the medieval Muslim system.15 The data from studying the regular Ikhshidid
coinage indicate that there was a social ranking to parts of one’s name and the part
of a medieval Muslim name used on the coinage was neither an arbitrary act nor
done on a whim.
The most important part of a name was that of the laqab. ‘Abbasid caliphs
were known by their laqab symbolizing the prestige associated with it. Military
leaders who became amir al-umara’ when they received a laqab inscribed their
new title on the coinage.16 In contrast Muhammad ibn Tughj acquired his laqab
years before inscribing it on his coinage. It is my guess that Ibn Tughj put his
laqab on his coinage when he did to indicate that he, al-Ikhshid, had restored the
quality of his dinars and the reputation of the gold coinage, which previously,
without the appearance of his laqab, he had been debasing. Another reason for
the eventual inclusion of his laqab on ‘al-Ikhshid’ his coinage was related to the
appearance of the laqabs of the Hamdanid brothers on Baghdad dinars and dir-
hams. Copying inscriptions found on the coinage of Hamdanid coins, particularly
those of al-Ikhshid’s military rival Sayf al-Dawla, also explains the appearance of
the so-called Shi‘ite phrase wa ‘ala alihi on Ikhshidid coinage. Their inclusion on
the coinage was not because al-Ikhshid was a closet Shi‘ite or agent of the Fati-
mids, a threat he used for his own in negotiating with the caliphs in Baghdad. Al-
Ikhshid and then his son Abu-l-Qasim Unujur copied innovations undertaken in
Hamdanid Aleppo to prove they were their equal.
Conclusion 105
The next prestigious part of a medieval Muslim name was the kunya. Since
Muhammad ibn Tughj’s son and successor Unujur had been called by his kunya
by the caliph when they met at Raqqa before Unujur became governor of Egypt
and Palestine, he emphasized this status by using his kunya Abu-l-Qasim on his
coinage and not his ism Unujur when he became govornor. In addition, he used
the more prestigious nasab Ibn al-Ikhshid rather than Ibn Muhammad. Thus
Unujur capitalized on both the prestige of his father’s laqab and his right to
inscribe his own kunya.
Unujur’s successors only used their ism because none of them received a laqab
from a caliph nor were called by a caliph by their kunya. Societal rules, which do
not seem to be articulated in other historical sources, were at work. What is more
surprising is that Kafur, who directly or indirectly controlled Egypt for many
years, never put any part of his full name on the regular coinage and only signaled
his political role on the dinars and dirhams in Ikhshidid lands from the mid-340s
by the inclusion of the first letter of his ism, that is the letter kaf. In the case of
Kafur the medieval chroniclers make it very clear that his name was pronounced
in the Friday sermon, which signals that sikka and khutba were subject to different
rules in terms of who was named and how.
Even in the last years of Ikhshidid rule when al-Hasan bin ‘Ubayd Allah was
de facto ruler and Ahmad bin Ali was de jure ruler, the rules related to the place-
ment of names on coinage continued to be applied. The chronicles list Ahmad as
governor, but the numismatic evidence indicates that al-Hasan was the more
important figure. This is further demonstrated by the appearance on some of the
last issues of the common ancestor for all family members, Tughj, rather than the
more illustrious founder of the dynasty al-Ikhshid who was ‘Ali’s grandfather but
was only indirectly related to al-Hasan. Ironically, the period ends with al-Hasan’s
name being relegated to the third position when he became governor of Ramla
for the Qarmatians.
There is further evidence that what went on the coinage and what appeared
in other forms of material culture or was announced in the khutba were different.
There is a published tiraz fragment with the kunya of the Ikhshidid ruler Ali while
that same kunya does not appear on any of his known coinage. Additional studies
of all the inscriptions and textual references from the second Abbasid monetary
epoch are necessary in order to draw a stronger conclusion, but the preliminary
results of this examination indicates that what was permitted in having one’s name
announced in the Friday sermon, carved on monuments, sewn on textiles, used
on official correspondence, and inscribed on coinage were not the same, with the
last being the most restrictive. What makes all of this so remarkable is that there
106 Conclusion
were no political forces preventing the Ikhshidids from putting whatever they
wished on their coinage. The fact that they did not must be understood as a result
of what Abbasid Muslim society meant by the right of sikka. Certain parts of one’s
name could appear on the coinage, but only if the political leader had acquired
them in an appropriate manner. The Ikhshidid rulers, as part of that world,
accepted the norms and do not appear to have violated them.
An examination of Ikhshidid numismatic evidence leads to the conclusion that
the term sikka must be qualified. Gold and silver issues minted in a specific geo-
graphic area/monetary zone appear to conform to understood rules about design,
script, text and what parts of a name could be used where. Therefore, while dinars
and dirhams struck in Ikhshidid Egypt and Syria followed monetary models,
which can be traced back to the reign of the Caliph al-Ma’mun, the gold and silver
issues of the fourth/tenth century Hijaz followed a different model.
Far more valuable for this study has been the importance of presentation
pieces, that is, numismatic material created for specific occasions whose inscrip-
tions, layout, and even images differ from conventional coinage. For example,
there is Ikhshidid numismatic material with the inscribed title mawla amir al-
mu’minin, which was also used by Muhammad ibn Tughj in his official corre-
spondence with the Byzantine Emperor.There is also data from presentation
pieces on the use of the shorter title al-amir. These two titles do not appear on
the regular dinars and dirhams indicating that their use on the standard gold and
silver issues was not considered appropriate. These titles do appear in official cor-
respondence and even in woven tiraz. Again, a careful study of the coinage, in this
case presentation pieces versus regular dinars and dirhams, enables us to see soci-
etal rules at work which are not recorded in any of the narrative sources.
The appearance of a specific tamga in the form of a pitch fork on a Muham-
mad ibn Tughj presentation piece illustrates that his ties to his Central Asia family
origins were stronger than previously known. The coinage also demonstrates that
Muhammad ibn Tughj’s request for the specific laqab al-Ikhshid was not an iso-
lated act, but part of the way in which he wished to be perceived as a descendant
of Central Asian nobility. Finally, human images in both gold and silver illustrate
how far presentation pieces could vary from standard coins.
A careful study of the coinage in conjunction with other textual data indicates
that there was also a difference between the right of being named in the khutba
and the sikka. The chronicles make it very clear that Muhammad ibn Tughj pro-
claimed his laqab, al-Ikhshid, from the pulpits of his lands and used it in his corre-
spondence from the time he received official confirmation but he did not
immediately inscribe it on his coinage. Kafur ruled Egypt and Syria as governor
Conclusion 107
and had his name proclaimed in the mosques during the khutba, but did not have
any part of his name inscribed on his dinars and dirhams.
From 322 until the end of the dynasty, there were four different Abbasid
caliphs. The chronicles record that when news of the name of the new Abbasid
caliph reached Egypt, it was proclaimed from the minbars of Egypt. Four times—
322, 329, 333, and 334—two different caliphs were mentioned in the Friday
khutba in the same Muslim year. In the first two cases, there are enough numis-
matic specimens available for 322 and 329 to prove that coinage was inscribed in
the name of each of the caliphs during the same Muslim year. But for 333 and
334, there are virtually no coins in the name of the new caliph. This was not only
true for Ikhshidid issues but for those of the Hamdanids as well. Both did not ini-
tially accept the deposition of al-Muttaqi or that of al-Mustakfi on their coinage.
Only in 335, after the death of al-Ikhshid and a peace treaty between the Hamda-
nid Nasir al-Dawla and the Buyid Mu’izz al-Dawla, do the dinars and dirhams of
Ikhshidids, Hamdanids, and Buyids all have the name of the same caliph. Even if
more coins are found in the name of a second caliph from Ikhshidid and Hamda-
nid mints for 333 and 334, the weight of numismatic evidence indicates that cer-
tain politico-military leaders—al-Ikhshid and his Hamdanid counterparts—were
withholding one form of public recognition of a new caliph, the sikka, while the
ulama from the pulpits in their lands were saying prayers in the name of the new
Abbasid caliph, the khutba.
While this study relied heavily on catalogues many of whose specimens were
not illustrated, future scholars throughout the world will have greater access to
numismatic data than their earlier counterparts. The web has revolutionized
opportunities for Islamic numismatic studies. Sales catalogues such as those for
Steve Album Sales, Baldwins, Morton and Brown, and many others illustrate all
their specimens. The American Numismatic Society has a number of its Islamic
holdings available in a digital form on its website and hopefully they and other
museums will put more and more specimens on the web. The largest number of
illustrated specimens of Islamic coinage can be found at www.zeno.ru, an abso-
lutely essential resource for future researchers. For comparative studies a database
of all Islamic inscriptions found on monuments in a part of Cairo will be available
in a searchable electronic form.17 It is hoped that this will be a model for others
17. Bernard O’Kane, Documentation of the Inscriptions in the Historic Zone of Cairo (Cairo: AUC
Press, Forthcoming). Jere L. Bacharach, Raafat al-Nabarawy, Sherif Anwar, and Ahmed Yousef.
A Complete Catalog (Sylloge) of the Glass Weights, Vessel Stamps, and Ring Weights in the Gayer-Anderson
Museum, Cairo (Mathaf Bayt al-Kritiliyya) (American Numismatic Webpage: http://www.amnum-
soc.org).
108 Conclusion
who work on monumental inscriptions. Inscriptions from tombstones, textiles
and ceramics also lend themselves to being stored as searchable databases and it
is hoped that such tools will be created.18
Coda
For those who feel more fiction than fact, more caution than conclusion, has been
presented in this study, I will speculate on the problems a scholar centuries from
now may face when examining coinage from the early twenty-first century. The
researcher will find that there were two major monetary zones, the U.S. and the
E.U., both of which had a common type of currency circulating in their geo-
graphic regions. In the U.S. the obverse of the quarter or 25 cents piece was con-
stant but the reverse eventually included fifty varieties with the name of each U.S.
State inscribed on the reverse. In Europe all Euro coins have the same obverse for
each denomination but each reverse has a unique layout based upon the design
associated with the named E.U. member. Interpreting the symbols on the reverse
of either the U.S. or Euro series will be a challenge for a researcher who will have,
at least, the name of the State or European Country as a place to start.
Figure 4.1
U.S. one dollar coin—the Sacagawea.
Far more challenging will be making sense of a relatively rare U.S. coin labeled
“One Dollar” and issued from 2000. All the rest of the inscribed information on
18. Interesting ideas on tiraz can be found in Sheila S. Blair, “Inscriptions on Medieval Islamic Tex-
tiles,” Islamische Textilkunst der Mittelalters: Aktuelle Probleme (Riggisberg: Abegg Stiftung, 1997):
95–104.
Conclusion 109
the dollar coin parallels other U.S. coinage, with such phrases as “In God We
Trust,” “Liberty,” “United States of America”. But unlike the circulating U.S. silver
coinage with ridged edges this gold colored issue has a smooth edge. These
changes were made in order to differentiate the new coin visually and physically
from other circulating issues. The obverse features an unnamed Indian woman
with a child in a papoose while the reverse has a soaring eagle, a form not found
on any other U.S. currency. In addition, unlike other U.S. issues such as the U.S.
dollar where on the Great Seal of the United States there are 13 steps on the
unfinished pyramid, 13 stars, 13 stripes, 13 feathers, and 13 arrows, symbolizing
the original 13 U.S. colonies or the earlier Susan B. Anthony silver dollar with 13
stars on the reverse, this gold colored dollar piece has on the reverse 17 stars.
Will there be enough information for that future scholar to document that by
2000 the U.S. Government wanted another living female for their dollar coin to
replace the earlier Susan B. Anthony silver dollar coin? Will the future researcher
be able to find the written material that identifies the figures as Sacagawea (1790–
1812 or 1884) with her son Jean-Paul Baptiste, as well as the critical information
that she accompanied the Lewis and Clark Expedition as their guide and inter-
preter from the upper Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean and back again?19
Will the record enable the future historian to know to associate the 17 stars with
the 17 States in the U.S. at the time of the Lewis and Clark Expedition or discover
that a committee at the U.S. Mint picked the soaring eagle design over more tradi-
tional representations of the eagle? Only in conjunction with other textual sources
can material culture such as numismatic evidence be used for a more nuanced
understanding of the values of the societies that minted them.
19. The official statement on the new issue can be found at the U.S. Mint website at http://www.
uwmint.gov/dollarcoin/winner.cfm. Additional discussions can be found at the following: “Mint offers
opportunity for comment on dollar,” Numismatic News, December 22, 1998: 39; James C. Benfield,
“Arts panel picks two,” Numismatic News, January 5, 1999; and David L. Ganz, “Get rid of the baby?,”
Numismatic News, January 12, 1999.
110 Conclusion
Appendix 1
Isolated Letters on Ikhshidid
Coins
20. In the case of Buyid coins, some isolated letters were associated with a particular die cutter.
Treadwell, Buyid Coins, iv.
21. Bates, ‘Nobility,” 279.
Those years at the end of the table marked by “+” indicate that the kaf for
Kafur continued through 356 and the last coins associated with his rule.
Isolated letters appear below the field inscription unless noted otherwise.
The sign “—” indicates that there are no letters on that face of the coin.
Table 10
Isolated letters on dinars and dirhams
112 Appendix 1
Table 10 (Cont'd)
Appendix 1 113
Appendix 2
The Weights of Ikhshidid
Coins
Most of the Egyptian dinars minted during the governorship of Muhammad ibn
Tughj weigh in the 4.00 to 4.25 gram range. As for the reign of his son and succes-
sor, Abu-l-Qasim Unujur, most dinars struck in Egypt before 340 weigh less than
3.70 with a peak of 3.50 grams. After 340 virtually all the Egyptian dinars for Abu-
l-Qasim’s reign and those of his successors weigh between 3.90 and 4.45 with a
peak at 4.20 grams. The dinars minted in Palestine show a wider range of weights
and even less adherence to a norm. The range of weights for the silver coinage,
irrespective of mint, is greater than that of the dinars.
A canonical Islamic dinar theoretically weighed 4.25 grams, but as seen from
the preceding generalizations and specific data in the catalogue individual Ikhshi-
did pieces minted over the 35 years of their rule varied from less than 3.00 to over
4.60. The great variations in the weights of individual dinars must have necessi-
tated exchanges of gold currency by weight rather than by number. The same
conclusion can be reached for exchanges involving dirhams in light of the weight
range for individual pieces. The relationship between any trends of the relative
weights of Ikhshidid dinars over time, Ikhshidid economic or even monetary
developments cannot be established since adequate textual evidence to track price
movements, possible periods of inflation or deflation, or other trends is lacking.22
22. A fascinating discussion of how one can examine data related to both mint production and
weight variations can be found in David J. Wasserstein, “Islamic Coins and their Catalogues III: The
Ikhshidids,” Israel Numismatic Research IV (2009): 121–33.
Glossary
amir al-umara’ A title held by the most powerful politico-military leader at the
Abbasid court during the fourth/tenth century.
brockage Refers to a coin where a previously struck flan sticks to one of
the two dies and the result is that the new flan is composed of
one side with a normal inscription while the other side has an
incused retrograde image of the same die.
die The piece of hard metal which is used to strike the flan; the
inscriptions are carved in reverse so they are readable on the
struck coin.
die link When one die was used for one face of one coin with another
die, and then again with a different second die.
dinar A gold coin.
dirham A silver coin.
fals A copper coin.
flan The flat piece of metal, usually round, which is struck by
the dies.
ibriz A word appearing on Hamdanid gold coins indicating their high
degree of purity.
ism A proper name, usually given at birth, and the name under
which an individual would be found in medieval dictionaries.
kunya A teknonym in the sense of ‘father of . . . ,’ which may refer to
one’s actual child or an epithet or honorific sense of parentage.
laqab An honorific title, which can be earned or acquired such as in
the case of al-Ikhshid. Abbasid caliphs were known by their
laqabs, which were usually compound names ending in a refer-
ence to God (Allah). Other compound names ended in al-
Dawla (State) as in Nasir al-Dawla (Defender of the State).
muling When a flan is struck by obverse and reverse dies which don’t
belong together.
nasab A patronym in the sense of ‘son of . . . ,’ which may refer to
one’s actual child or an epithet or honorific name.
nisba This is a broad category of names, which included professions,
places of origin, or original ownership in the case of those of
slave origin such as al-Ikhshidi (Belonging to al-Ikhshid).
obverse The side of a flan struck by the anvil die; ‘heads.’
reverse The side of a flan struck by the hammer die; ‘tails.’
shahada Affirmation of God’s unity.
shari‘a Muslim law.
sikka The right to strike coins; the striking of coins.
tamga A design often associated with a Central Asian tribe or political
entity and that was probably first used for marking ownership of
horses and other animals. It then moved on to mark a clan or
tribal belonging and eventually an ethno-political symbol and
sui generic heraldic emblem among Iranian and Turkic peoples.
tiraz An inscribed band woven into clothing.
116 Glossary
Part Two
A Catalogue of Ikhshidid
Numismatic Material
Chapter 5
Introduction
Producing a catalogue is not a neutral act but is the creation of its author. There
are numerous ways in which the data can be arranged. The organizational struc-
ture I have chosen reflects how I hope the following material can be used by col-
lectors, curators, and other scholars. Therefore, the last section lists all the
obverse and reverse types of regular dinars and dirhams with images, the Arabic,
and the relevant catalogue numbers. This is preceded by the actual catalogue of
the regular second Abbasid epoch style dinars and dirhams minted by the Ikhshi-
did rulers. This is followed by all second Abbasid epoch dirhams. The last section
includes the few copper coins, those minted in Mecca, and all presentation pieces
including the medallion.
Within the catalogue I have arranged the material by ruler since it is relatively
easy to determine in whose name the coin was struck as this information is nor-
mally on the reverse field. Therefore, all the dinars of Muhammad ibn Tughj al-
Ikhshid are listed before beginning with the gold issues of his elder son Abu-l-
Qasim Unujur and then his successors. The known examples are then arranged
by mint: Misr, Filastin, Tabariya, Dimashq, Hims, and Halab. The next subdivi-
sion is date with specimens whose mint and/or date cannot be read placed at the
end of that governor’s section. Finally, a number is given to each unique type.
Numismatists have never fully agreed what constitutes a coin type. As Album
wrote, “There is no simple and unequivocal definition of what constitutes a ‘type’
in Islamic numismatics. Anyone familiar with a broad range of Islamic numis-
matics will immediately understand that the nature of the evidence precludes a
‘one-size-fits’ all definition.”1 For Islamic coinage, the broad categories are fairly
easy: each unique combination of a mint name and Muslim date constitute a type.
If within the same mint-date combination there are two or more examples with
different inscriptions in their field or margin, each of these constitutes a separate
type. Finally, I have taken the position that if everything inscribed on two coins is
the same except that one example has an isolated letter(s) and the second doesn’t,
then I have two types and each is given a unique catalogue number. On the other
hand, the appearance of pellets on some specimens within a unique type but not
on others, while noted in the catalogue as “with pellets” followed by the referen-
ces, did not result in my labeling them as two different types.
The last part of the catalogue includes all other numismatic material arranged
in the following order: copper issues, Meccan coinage, presentation pieces, and
the one medallion, which is really another form of a presentation piece.
Another goal has been to create a numbering system, which would enable a
reader to identify some of the basic information on that coin without the necessity
of constantly referring to an arbitrary consecutive numbering system. I have done
that in the first half of this book where every illustration has a catalogue number
followed by a series of letters and numbers which tell the reader the mint, metal
and year for that coin. The following illustrates my long form: Catalogue item
115/MS332a means that the coin type is item 115; it was minted at Misr
(Fustat); it was a Silver coin (dirham); it was dated A.H. 332; and it was the first
type found. When a second variation was found for that mint/metal/date combi-
nation, it was given a new catalogue number. In this theoretical example the long
catalogue number would be 116/MS332b where the (b) represents the second
coin type. If any of these elements were unknown an (X) would be placed in the
appropriate place.
The basic layout for the catalogue is as follows with “add” referring to addi-
tional information such as the appearance of isolated letters:
The Ob(verse) and Rev(erse) are listed by number against a master list where
the field inscription in Arabic and an appropriate photograph are given for the
120 Introduction
second Abbasid epoch style coins. Again, the presentation pieces are illustrated
within the catalogue along with the inscriptions in Arabic. “Letter” refers to the
appearance of isolated letters. The data are listed alphabetically by source includ-
ing the diameter in millimeters and the weight in grams of the coin when it is
known. A full list of the catalogue abbreviations is given in a separate section.
Abbreviations: Mints in the order listed
M Misr Fustat
F Filasrin Ramla
T Tabariya Tiberias
D Dimashq Damascus
H Hims Homs
HA Halab Aleppo
MA Makkah Mecca
TA Tarsus Tarsus
Introduction 121
181b al-Muti’ Abu-l-Qasim Dimashq silver 343 new date
181c al-Muti’ Abu-l-Qasim Dimashq silver 345 new date
181d al-Muti’ Abu-l-Qasim Dimashq silver 346 new date
189a al-Muti’ Abu-l-Qasim X silver XXX
198a al-Muti’ Ali X silver XXX
200a al-Muti’ Tabariya Kafur silver 35X
209a XXX Abu-l-Qasim Tarsus copper XXX new type
210a al-Mustafki al-Ikhshid Mecca silver 334 new date
122 Introduction
Chapter 6
Catalogue—Gold Coins
Filastin Mint
31 FG323a al-Radi O1 R1
Balog. Berman Letter (22/3.55). Fadi (-/2.83). Nutzel 1794 (22/4.59).
Shamma (22/3.38). Baldwin Auction 24 (2013) 4389 (-/4.08).
Filastin Mint
68 FG335a al-Muti’/Abu-l-Qasim O4 R9
Pellets on either side of Li-llah on rev. Pellet below rev. ANS 1957.82.2
(22/4.45); 1972.288.114 (23/4.57). BMC IX 323k (22/3.93). Cotte-
vieille-Giroudet RN 1935 371 (22/4.59). Levy 76 (23/4.05). Munzel
(22/4.40). Paris A 128 (23/4.59). Qatar II 2344 (23/3.85). SICA 6:154
(21/4.50); 6:155 (22/4.17 = Study 34); 6:156 (24/4.18). Vienna 7758
(-/4.10 holed); 7759 (-/3.85). Without Pellets on rev. Shamma Study 30
(23/3.48), 31; 32. Baldwin Auction 22 (2012) 3367 (-/4.21); 23 (2012)
329 (-/4.14); 24 (2013) 4573 & 25 (2013): 432 (-/4.60); 25 (2013) 433
(-/2.91). Morton & Eden (Nov. 2013) 587 (-/4.16). Zeno 74650
(22.5/3.15).
69 FG335X al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim
Balog. Paris (27/4.45). Shamma Study 36.
70 FG336a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O4 R9
Pellets on either side of Li-llah on rev. Khed 1807/K938 (22/3.59).
71 MG323a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O4 R9
Munzel (21/3.63).
72 FG337b al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O4 وabove R9 below
ﺺbelow
طand backward ط, on either side of Li-llah. Album Letter 1976 (-/3.02);
(-/4.15); (-/3.44). Caesaria 2 = IAA 28642 (22/2.86). Damascus 7119
(22/4.20); 14735 (21/4.03); 14737 (21/3.51); 14737 (21/3.56);
(4738 (22/3.54); 14739 (23/3.49); 15234 (21/3.37). Kazan (22/3.83).
Levy 77 (21/4.29); 78 (22/2.75). London 1908.1.10.2065 (22/3.93).
SICA 6:157 (21/3.57); 6:158 (22/2.35); 6:159 (22/3.55); 6:160 (21/3–
83); 6:161 (22/3.61); 6:162 (21/3.49); 6:163 (21/3.38); 6:164 (21/
3.35); 6:165 (21/3.41); 6:166 (22/4.15). Baldwin Auction 11 (2006)
3254 (-/3.99); 21 (2012) 370 (-/3.25); 24 (2013) 4574 (-/4.19); 25
(2013) 434 (-/3.74). Morton & Eden (May, 2010) 738 (-/3.49). Zeno
31371: (22/2.83); 52053: (22/2.96).
Filastin Mint
96 FG350a al-Muti‘/’Ali 06 كbelow R11
ANS 1967.158.1 (22/4.31); 1971.63.1 (21/4.84); 1972.288.123. Cairo
17007. Damascus 14460 (22/3–85 = Shamma Study 134). Fahmi 3044
(22/3.75). IM 5851 (-/3.50); 5852 (-/4.76). Khed 1814/K943 (22/4.13).
Lavoix III 57 (21/3.13). Qatar II 2359 (22/3.23). SICA 6:200 (22/4.27);
6:201 (22/4.54). Shamma Study 135–137; 139A. Baldwin Auction 23
(2012) 333 (-/3.62). Spink March, 2014 104 (-/3.47).
Filastin Mint
104 FG355a al-Muti‘(Kafur) Ol كbelow R11
Album (-/4.84); (-/4.36). ANS 1002.1.781 (22/3.41); 1957.82.7 (21/
2.69); 1972.288.125 (23/3.57). Artuk 503 (20/2.35). Berman Letter (22/
2.30). BMC II 239 (23/4.94). Khed 1820/K949 (22/2.64). Lavoix I 1269
(22/4.41). Levy 86 (24/4.36); 87 (23/3.46). Mayer 114 (22/4.00). Rog-
ers 186. Shamma Study 183 (23/3.75); 184 (25/2.61). SICA 6:208 (23/
4.38); 6:209 (21/3.80); 6:210 (23/3.60). SNAT 140 (-/4.83). Baldwin
Auction 11 (2006) 114 (-/4.66); 16 (2009) 435 (-/3.96); 17 (2010) 359
(-/4.65); 18 (2011) 519 (-/3.84); 20 (2012) 372 (-/3.49). Morton &
Eden (Dec. 2009) 512 (-/3.36); (Nov. 2007) 571 (-/3.51).
Filastin Mint
117 FS323a al-Radi O1 R1
Caesaria 63 = IAA 28693 (25/3.60). Rock 2.57 = IAA 53110
(26/3.62).
118 FS32x al-Radi O1 R1
Fadi (-/3.2 date 325?); (-/2.5x dace 328?); (-/3.5x); (-/2.4x date 329?).
119 FS329a al-Muttaqi O2 R2
Fadi (-/3.3x). Kmietowicz 24.
120 FS332a al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid O2 R5
Pellets on either side of Li-llah on rev. ANS 1917.215.799 (25/3.O4);
1971.316.935 (25/3.12). Bacharach and Awad 1 (24/2.40); 2 (23/
3.05). Damascus 2989.147. Linder-Welin Nordish 1146 (25/3.51)
Shamma Study 11 (25/2.94). SNAT 123 (-/2.52).
121 FS333a al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid O2 R3
Bacharach and Awad 3 (22/3.30); 4 (24/3.05); 5 (24/2.70). Damas-
cus 2016 (24/2.94). Shamma (21/4.30). Soret. Yepi Kredi 16292
(24/3.00).
122 FS334a al-Mustakfi/al-Ikhshid O1 R8
Shamma (22/4.22). Shamma Study 24, 25, 26
Tabariya Mint
123 TS323a al-Radi O1 R1
Lavoix 1 1229 (24/3.60).
124 TS329a al-Muttaqi O1 R2
Album List 25 (Feb. 1982) #334. Blau#17. Rock 2.66 = IAA 53119
(27/2.74); 2.67 = IAA 53122 (27/3.02). With pellet below rev.
Shamma (26/2.52).
125 TS329b al-Muttaqi O2 R2 حbelow
SNAT 385 (-/1.94).
126 TS330a al-Muttaqi O2 R2 طbelow
ANS 1917.215.430 (-/2.58).
Dimashq Mint
129 DS323a al-Radi O1 R1
Fadi (-/2.6x); (-/3.5x). Rock 2.53 = IAA 53106 (29/2.46).
130 DS324a al-Radi O1 R1
Negic
131 DS33la al-Muttaqi/al-Ikbshid O2 R3
Fadi (-/2.9x) (date difficult to read),
132 DS332a al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid O2 R3
Damascus. Qatar II 2363 (27/2.95). Rock 19.7 = IAA 56238
(27/2.27).
133 DS332b al-Muttaqi/al-Ikbshid O2 R5
Balog. Paris A 134 (25/3.35). T€ ubingen CA2 C3.
133a DS332c al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid O2 R17
London Private
134 DS333a al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid O2 R6
ANS 1917.215.775 (24/3.54). Bacharach and Awad 6 (22/2.30); 7
(25/2.50). Caesaria 46 = IAA 28683 (28/2.88). Linder-Welin 5 (26/
4.09). SICA 6:127 (25/2.73). Torenberg Class XVI #1 p. 262. With pel-
let above ob. Paris A 135 (27/3.72); 136 (26/3.07). SICA
6:128 (-/3.44).
135 DS333X al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid
Album List 25 (Feb. 82) 372. Lemaire p. 299 — 2 specimens. Paris 49
bis. Soret. Tubingen CA2 C3; CA2 C5.
136 DS334b at-Mustafi/al-Ikhshid O1a R7
With Li-llah at cop and bottom and Muhammad at 90 and 270 degrees
on ob. Damascus 1823 (23/3.86 holed). London Private (-/2.70).
137 DS334a al-Mustafi/al-Ikhshid O1 R8
With dot above ob., without pellets on rev. Album List 25 (Feb., 82)
373, 373a; 73 (March, 91) 160. ANS 1917.215.776 (26/3.13);
1917.316.934 (25/3.55). Bacharach and Awad 8 (25/3.00); 9 (24/
3.10); 10 (26/3.55). BM 1957.6.2.1. (26/3.73). Fadi (-/2.6x). Gosset.
Haddad (25/2.38). Linder-Welin letter. Paris A 132 (25/3.50); 137
Hims Mint
138 HS323a al-Radi O1 R1
ANS 1972.79.659 (-/3.10). Nutzel 1815 (21/1.53); 1816 (23/3.06).
Nur 4430 (26/3–53). SICA 4: (27/3–24). Album Auction 12 (2012)
Lot 173: Item 116861 (-/4.17).
139 HS33la al-Muttaqi O2 R2 حbelow
With pellets on both sides of Li-llah on rev. Khalili 1551 (27/4.52).
Rock 2.65 = IAA 53118 (27/3.29).
140 HS33lb al-Muttaqilal-Ikhshid O2 R3
Paris (25/3.03).
141 HS332a al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhshid O2 R3
Bacharach and Awad 11 (25/2.55). Haddad.
Mintless
142 XS332a al-Muttaqi/al-Ikhsbid O2 R3
Rock 19.12 = IAA 56243 (26/2.99).
143 XS3Xxa d-Munaqi/al-lkhshid O2 R3
Pere 16292 (24/3.00).
Tabariya Mint
159 TS335a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim
Shamma Study 40.
160 TS336a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O5 R11 طbelow
Pellets on either side of Li-llah on rev. ANS 1949.163.86 (24/3.12);
1949.163.85 (25/2.89). SICA 6: 150 (-/2.87)
160a TS336aa al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim
Album Auction 10 (2011) Lot 464: Item 21853 (-/3.38).
Dimashq Mint
173 D5335a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O4 R9
ANS 1917.215.777 (26/3.69). Fadi (-/1.7x). Haddad (27/2.98).
Hims Mini
185 HS336a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O5 R13
Pellet below rev. London Private (-/2.1x). Tornberg III 110..
186 HS336b al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O5 R10 below
Pellet below ob. Album Hoard 23. Damascus 0440 (-/3.37). Fadi
(-/4.7x). Tubingen CA2 F5-/CA2 F6. Baldwin Auction 22 (2012)
3368 (2.68). Zeno 46943: (23/2.94).
Halab Mint
187 HAS336a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O4 R9
Pellets on either side of Li-llah. SICA 147 (-/2.29). Baldwin Auction
14 (2008) 187 (-/3.37).
Mintless
188 XS337a al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim
Pere: 16293 (26/2.65); (28/3.67).
189 XS33Xa al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim O4 R11
Kmietowicz 423 (-/3.68). Rock 19.20 = IAA 56251 (28/3.41); 19.22 =
IAA 56253 (25/2.88); 19.23 = IAA 56254 (24/3.07); 19.24 =
IAA 56255 (27/3.49); 19.27 = IAA 56258 (26/3.35).
189a XS3XXa al-Muti‘/Abu-l-Qasim
Zeno 128167 (25/4.00)
Filastin Mint
191 FS350a al-Muti‘/’Ali O6 كbelow R11
Without Pellets on rev. Rock 19.29 = IAA 56260 (27/2.30).
Tabariya Mint
196 T5350a al-Muti‘/’Ali O6 كbelow R11
Damascus 14410 (26/-). London Private (-2.7x).
197 TS353a al-Muti‘/’Ali O6 كbelow R11
Damascus 14408 (25/2.61 = Shamma Study 189). London Private
(-/1.7x) (very poor condition). Album Auction, List 255 Item
No. 89048 (xx/1.79); List 256 Item No. 89049 (xx/2.45); Baldwin
Auction 11 (2006) 113 (2.41); 6 (2009) 436 (2.08).
Kafur (355–356)
Filastin Mint
199 FS355a al-Muti’/(Kafur) O1 كbelow R11
Fadi (-/2.7x). Damascus 2989.83 (26/2.90). Rock 19.40 = IAA 56271
(25/2.42); 19.41 = IAA 56272 (23,3.3). Shamma Study 187A (21/
1.20); 188 (21/1.66). SICA 6:210 (-/2.79). SNAT 141 (-/2.90);
142 (-/236).
Tabariya Mint
200 TS355a al-Muti‘i(Kafur) O1 كbelow R11
Shamma Study 189 (25/2.61).
Tabariya Mint
206 TS358a d-Muti‘/Ahmad O9 R16
Two pellets below on rev. Album Hoard 42; 43. SNAT 392 (-/2.62)
The following institutions and individuals have given permission for the repro-
duction of the plates or photos listed below. I wish to express my deep apprecia-
tion to each of them for their support.
Canada
With permission from William Barrett and Giulio Bernardi of Italy. Also, Zen-
o.ru # 129833.
France: Paris
Permission was granted by Dr. A. Negre, Conservateur du Department des
monnaies, medailles et antiques, Bibliotheque nationale, to reproduce the photo
of 213/MS32(4)b.
Credits 171
Germany: Forschungsstelle f€ur Islamische Numismatik Orientalisches Seminar der
Universit€at T€ubingen (T€ubingen University Coin Collection)
Permission was granted by Dr. Lutz Ilisch, Curator of Islamic Coins, to repro-
duce the following items: 07 (SNAT 145); 09 (SNAT 392); RIO (T€ubingen
CA2 El); R15 (SNAT 145); R 16 (SNAT 150); Figure 3.11 (SNAT 145); Figure
3.11 (SNAT 143 and SNAT 394).
172 Credits
Russia: Zeno.Ru
Permission was granted by Zeno.Ru. O10 (Zeno 128167). R18 (Zeno 93105
= Baldwin& Sons); 209a (69237). 210a (Zeno 118058=Baldwin 23(2012) 328.
Credits 173
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Appendix 3
Standard Obverse and
Reverse Coin Types—
Illustrated, Transcribed,
Referenced
Appendix 3 189
Second Abbasid Monetary Epoch Obverse Types
190 Appendix 3
Appendix 3 191
192 Appendix 3
Second Abbasid Monetary Epoch Reverse Types
Appendix 3 193
194 Appendix 3
Appendix 3 195
196 Appendix 3
Appendix 3 197
Second Abbasid Monetary Epoch Marginal Legends
198 Appendix 3