The Qarakhanid fals of Ilaq sits at a complicated moment in the dynasty's internal politics. By the early eleventh century, the Qarakhanids operated as a loose confederation of appanage rulers, each striking in their own name while acknowledging a senior khan — which is precisely what this piece documents. Muhammad b. Mansur citing Ahmad b. Ali on the same coin is not ceremony; it is a legible record of the subordination hierarchy in force at that specific moment, one that shifted repeatedly as the dynasty fractured and realigned across Transoxiana.
Ilaq, a mining-rich district northeast of Tashkent, had its own copper currency tradition well before the Qarakhanids absorbed it from the Samanids in the 990s.
The Qarakhanid fals of Ilaq sits at a complicated moment in the dynasty's internal politics. By the early eleventh century, the Qarakhanids operated as a loose confederation of appanage rulers, each striking in their own name while acknowledging a senior khan — which is precisely what this piece documents. Muhammad b. Mansur citing Ahmad b. Ali on the same coin is not ceremony; it is a legible record of the subordination hierarchy in force at that specific moment, one that shifted repeatedly as the dynasty fractured and realigned across Transoxiana.
Ilaq, a mining-rich district northeast of Tashkent, had its own copper currency tradition well before the Qarakhanids absorbed it from the Samanids in the 990s.