Nuh I ruled the Samanid amirate during a period of mounting pressure from Buyid expansion to the west and increasing Turkic military dominance within his own court — the same structural dependency on ghulam slave soldiers that would eventually unravel Samanid authority within two generations. His dinars were struck at multiple mints across Khurasan and Transoxiana, and attribution to a specific mint requires careful reading of the mint name in the margin, as die engravers of the period varied considerably in their letterforms. The A#1454 reference covers a broad type; individual pieces may command significantly different collector interest depending on mint.
Nuh I ruled the Samanid amirate during a period of mounting pressure from Buyid expansion to the west and increasing Turkic military dominance within his own court — the same structural dependency on ghulam slave soldiers that would eventually unravel Samanid authority within two generations. His dinars were struck at multiple mints across Khurasan and Transoxiana, and attribution to a specific mint requires careful reading of the mint name in the margin, as die engravers of the period varied considerably in their letterforms. The A#1454 reference covers a broad type; individual pieces may command significantly different collector interest depending on mint.