| Opis awersu |
The colourised national coat of arms of Tajikistan is depicted at centre, rendered in full colour against the polished field. The denomination appears below the arms, with the date at the bottom of the design. A bilingual legend in Cyrillic and Latin scripts encircles the central device, with fineness and weight specifications incorporated into the inscription. |
| Pismo awersu |
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| Opis rewersu |
A high-relief bust portrait of the Sufi scholar and poet Ali Hamadoni (1314–1384) occupies the central field, depicted facing slightly left, wearing a traditional turban and robes with a beard. The portrait is set within a raised inner circle against a dark, contrasting outer border. A bilingual legend in gilt Cyrillic and Latin lettering arcs around the periphery, reading 'АЛӢ ҲАМАДОНӢ • ALI HAMADONI'. The birth and death years '1314' and '1384' flank the portrait within the inner field, and the commemorative numeral '700', denoting the 700th anniversary of his birth, appears at the base flanked by laurel sprigs, highlighted in gilt. |
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Ali Hamadoni — formally Mir Sayyid Ali ibn Shihab al-Din Hamadani — was a 14th-century Sufi mystic and scholar whose influence on the spread of Islam into Kashmir was substantial enough that he is still venerated there as Shah-e-Hamadan centuries after his death. Born in Hamadan in present-day Iran, he made multiple journeys to Kashmir, reportedly accompanied by hundreds of craftsmen and scholars who permanently altered the region's cultural and religious character. Tajikistan has claimed him as a national figure, though his life and work crossed the boundaries of several modern states.