The so-called "ornamental" or anepigraphic dirhams of the Bulghar mint present one of the more persistent puzzles in Golden Horde numismatics. Lacking any legible inscription, they fall outside the standard administrative coinage that allowed the Mongol khans to broadcast authority and legitimacy across a vast territory — which makes their official sanction, or lack of it, genuinely unclear. Whether these were sanctioned emergency issues, local imitations, or the product of a mint operating with unusual autonomy remains debated among specialists.
Bulghar on the Volga was among the earliest and most productive Golden Horde mints, active well before Sarai eclipsed it administratively.
The so-called "ornamental" or anepigraphic dirhams of the Bulghar mint present one of the more persistent puzzles in Golden Horde numismatics. Lacking any legible inscription, they fall outside the standard administrative coinage that allowed the Mongol khans to broadcast authority and legitimacy across a vast territory — which makes their official sanction, or lack of it, genuinely unclear. Whether these were sanctioned emergency issues, local imitations, or the product of a mint operating with unusual autonomy remains debated among specialists.
Bulghar on the Volga was among the earliest and most productive Golden Horde mints, active well before Sarai eclipsed it administratively.