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|---|---|
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| 正面铭文 | VROSIVS RES S STEFAN |
| 背面描述 | Christ Pantocrator, nimbate, seated frontally on an ornate decorated throne, holding a book of the Gospels with both hands before his chest. Small pellets are disposed symmetrically in the field on either side of the throne, serving as decorative fillers. The nimbus and enthroned posture conform closely to Byzantine iconographic convention, reflecting the strong ecclesiastical influence on Serbian medieval numismatic art. The Greek Christogram IC XC appears in the field, flanking the figure of Christ at left and right respectively. |
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| 附加信息 |
Stefan Uroš II Milutin ruled Serbia for nearly four decades, an unusually long and militarily aggressive reign that saw the kingdom expand deep into Byzantine Macedonia. Much of that expansion was formalized through his 1299 marriage to Simonida, the five-year-old daughter of Byzantine Emperor Andronikos II — a politically calculated union that secured territorial concessions rather than a battlefield. The Serbian mint operated under strong Byzantine monetary influence throughout this period, which explains the close formal relationship between Serbian dinars and contemporary Byzantine trachea in terms of weight standards and circulation geography.