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| 背面描述 | The reverse displays three horizontal bands of bold nasta'liq calligraphy filling the entire field, reading the royal epigraph attributing the gold coinage to Fath Ali Shah. The inscription is enriched with dense floral and pearl-dot ornamental motifs interspersed between and around the letterforms, creating an overall decorative effect characteristic of early Qajar dynastic coinage. The field is unbordered save for the raised bead border running along the coin's rim, consistent with the obverse. |
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| 铸造量 | 1212 (1798) |
| 附加信息 |
Fath Ali Shah did not actually take the throne until 1797, making early-dated issues from his reign — including Tehran-struck tumans of this type — among the first gold coinage produced under his authority. The Qajar dynasty was barely a generation old at this point; Agha Mohammad Khan, the dynasty's brutal founder, had been assassinated just the year prior. Gold tuman production at Tehran was closely tied to court expenditure and gift-giving rather than general commerce, which partly explains why surviving specimens vary so dramatically in sharpness — they were handled carefully by recipients, not spent.