Sri Yashaditya was among the last Hindu rulers of Sindh before the Umayyad general Muhammad ibn Qasim invaded in 711–712 AD, ending roughly a millennium of continuous Hindu and Buddhist rule in the region. The damma denomination itself was a small fractional silver unit that persisted through the Arab conquest and was later adapted by the new Islamic administration — the type survived the regime change even as the political order collapsed around it.
Sri Yashaditya was among the last Hindu rulers of Sindh before the Umayyad general Muhammad ibn Qasim invaded in 711–712 AD, ending roughly a millennium of continuous Hindu and Buddhist rule in the region. The damma denomination itself was a small fractional silver unit that persisted through the Arab conquest and was later adapted by the new Islamic administration — the type survived the regime change even as the political order collapsed around it.