Abd al-Malik I ruled the Samanid amirate for just seven years before dying at around age seventeen, reportedly thrown from a horse during a polo match. Copper fals of this reign are substantially rarer than the dynasty's celebrated silver dirhams, which dominated trans-Oxus and Volga trade routes during this period — the silver coinage was the economic instrument, and copper served local markets in Transoxiana and Khurasan at a level that rarely attracted serious archival attention.
Abd al-Malik I ruled the Samanid amirate for just seven years before dying at around age seventeen, reportedly thrown from a horse during a polo match. Copper fals of this reign are substantially rarer than the dynasty's celebrated silver dirhams, which dominated trans-Oxus and Volga trade routes during this period — the silver coinage was the economic instrument, and copper served local markets in Transoxiana and Khurasan at a level that rarely attracted serious archival attention.