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| 背面描述 | The reverse presents a bold Arabic inscription in a central cartouche-like arrangement, with large flowing strokes characteristic of the informal Naskh style employed by Mihrabanid mint workers. The central device consists of intertwined letter forms filling the flan, with additional legend elements visible in the surrounding field. The design is deeply struck in high relief relative to the thin copper flan, resulting in some spread at the edges. Traces of a marginal inscription or decorative border may be discerned along the periphery, though much is lost to the irregular flan shape. |
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| 边缘 | Plain. |
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| 附加信息 |
The Mihrabanids were a minor dynasty clinging to Sistan — the arid region straddling modern Iran and Afghanistan — as successive Mongol and Kartid pressures eroded their practical authority to little more than a rump lordship. Yamin al-Din Mahmud's brief rule in the early 1350s coincided with the final decades before Timur's campaigns effectively ended any meaningful Mihrabanid autonomy. Copper jitals from this period and region survive in small numbers, largely because Sistan's remote position kept it outside the major medieval coin-collecting circuits that fed European and Ottoman cabinets.