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Dirham - Anonymous Wasit

Issuer Umayyad Caliphate
Year 83-132 (702-750)
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Composition Silver (.9633) (XRF (Xray Fluorescence Spectroscopy), results are: 96.33% silver, 1.87% copper, 1.19% lead and 0.62% gold)
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Obverse lettering لا اله الا
الله وحده
لا شریك له
بسم الله ضرب هذا الدرهم بواسط سنة ثلث و عشرین و مـئه
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Reverse script Arabic (Kufic)
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Additional information

The anonymous Wasit dirham belongs to the reformed coinage introduced by Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan and his governor al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, who founded Wasit as a garrison city in Iraq around 702 specifically to consolidate Umayyad military control over a restive province. The monetary reform that produced this type deliberately purged all figural imagery in favor of Quranic inscriptions — a sharp break from the Sasanian-derived dirhams that preceded it. Al-Hajjaj ran the Wasit mint aggressively; the city did not yet exist when this series began.

The XRF-confirmed silver fineness of 96.33% is notably high and broadly consistent with the rigorous weight and purity standards al-Hajjaj enforced, sometimes under penalty of death for counterfeiters.

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