ISIS announced its own coinage system in 2014 as part of a broader claim to caliphate legitimacy, with physical currency intended to replace what the group called the "satanic" interest-based financial system. Actual distribution was minimal and largely propagandistic — most pieces circulated within tightly controlled territory in Syria and Iraq before the caliphate's territorial collapse accelerated sharply through 2017 and 2018.
By 1438 AH, ISIS held a fraction of its peak territory. Coins from this late issue are sparse in verified collections, and authentication remains complicated by the existence of tourist reproductions produced after the fact.
ISIS announced its own coinage system in 2014 as part of a broader claim to caliphate legitimacy, with physical currency intended to replace what the group called the "satanic" interest-based financial system. Actual distribution was minimal and largely propagandistic — most pieces circulated within tightly controlled territory in Syria and Iraq before the caliphate's territorial collapse accelerated sharply through 2017 and 2018.
By 1438 AH, ISIS held a fraction of its peak territory. Coins from this late issue are sparse in verified collections, and authentication remains complicated by the existence of tourist reproductions produced after the fact.