Toqta Khan consolidated Mongol authority over the western steppe after a civil war against Nogai — the powerful military commander who had effectively controlled the Golden Horde for decades. Nogai's defeat around 1299–1300 was a turning point, and the Saray mint's output under Toqta reflects a relatively stable administrative hand following years of contested authority. The Lion and Sun type draws on pre-Mongol Seljuk and Iranian symbolic vocabulary, its persistence into the Jochid coinage tradition more a matter of absorbed iconographic habit than deliberate ideological statement.
Half dirhams from this period are significantly scarcer than full dirhams, as the smaller flans were more vulnerable to loss and more frequently melted.
Toqta Khan consolidated Mongol authority over the western steppe after a civil war against Nogai — the powerful military commander who had effectively controlled the Golden Horde for decades. Nogai's defeat around 1299–1300 was a turning point, and the Saray mint's output under Toqta reflects a relatively stable administrative hand following years of contested authority. The Lion and Sun type draws on pre-Mongol Seljuk and Iranian symbolic vocabulary, its persistence into the Jochid coinage tradition more a matter of absorbed iconographic habit than deliberate ideological statement.
Half dirhams from this period are significantly scarcer than full dirhams, as the smaller flans were more vulnerable to loss and more frequently melted.