Ardashir I struck these earliest drachms in a deliberately Parthian idiom — a calculated political gesture from a ruler who had just destroyed the Arsacid dynasty at the Battle of Hormozdgan in 224 AD. The Parthian visual vocabulary was not imitated out of admiration but out of necessity: the administrative and monetary infrastructure he inherited was Arsacid, and abrupt stylistic rupture risked economic disruption in territories still adjusting to new rule.
The Göbl Type I/1 classification places these among the foundational issues of Sasanian coinage, predating the more assertive imperial style that emerged as Ardashir consolidated control eastward toward Khorasan and the Kushano-Sasanian frontier.
Ardashir I struck these earliest drachms in a deliberately Parthian idiom — a calculated political gesture from a ruler who had just destroyed the Arsacid dynasty at the Battle of Hormozdgan in 224 AD. The Parthian visual vocabulary was not imitated out of admiration but out of necessity: the administrative and monetary infrastructure he inherited was Arsacid, and abrupt stylistic rupture risked economic disruption in territories still adjusting to new rule.
The Göbl Type I/1 classification places these among the foundational issues of Sasanian coinage, predating the more assertive imperial style that emerged as Ardashir consolidated control eastward toward Khorasan and the Kushano-Sasanian frontier.