Issued under the Chaghatayid Khan Tarmashirin — whose regnal name "Sanjar" appears on this coinage — these dinars were struck across multiple mints simultaneously, a reflection of the fragmented administrative reality of the Chaghatai Khanate in its final coherent decades. Tarmashirin was unusual among his dynasty for converting to Islam and abandoning the traditional Mongol *yasa*, a decision that alienated the eastern nomadic factions and contributed directly to his overthrow and execution around 1334.
The Tirmidh mint attribution is the rarer of the three.
Issued under the Chaghatayid Khan Tarmashirin — whose regnal name "Sanjar" appears on this coinage — these dinars were struck across multiple mints simultaneously, a reflection of the fragmented administrative reality of the Chaghatai Khanate in its final coherent decades. Tarmashirin was unusual among his dynasty for converting to Islam and abandoning the traditional Mongol *yasa*, a decision that alienated the eastern nomadic factions and contributed directly to his overthrow and execution around 1334.
The Tirmidh mint attribution is the rarer of the three.