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Dirham - 'Ilkhan' Hulagu Khan

Issuer Ilkhanate
Year 1256-1265
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Weight 2.75 g
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Obverse description Central field occupied by a three-line Arabic Kalima inscription arranged horizontally within a plain inner circle: the Shahada reading 'There is no god but God, alone, without partner; Muhammad is the Messenger of God.' The legend is rendered in bold Naskhi script with pronounced relief typical of early Ilkhanid hammered coinage. A marginal legend band encircles the central field, separated by a single linear border. The flan is irregular and slightly broader than the die, with die-shift visible at the rim.
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Obverse lettering لا إله إلا الله
وحده لا شريك له
محمد رسول الله
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Additional information

Hulagu Khan's westward campaign culminated in the sack of Baghdad in 1258 — the destruction of the Abbasid Caliphate after five centuries — and these dirhams were struck during the decade that followed, as the Ilkhanate scrambled to establish administrative legitimacy across conquered Persian and Mesopotamian territories. Early Ilkhanid coinage reflects that institutional uncertainty: Hulagu never formally converted to Islam, and the mint apparatus he inherited was repurposed rather than reformed. The series shows considerable variation in die alignment and flan preparation, a direct consequence of absorbing multiple pre-existing mint operations.