Catalog
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| Issuer | Persis, Kingdom of |
|---|---|
| Year | 50-75 |
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| Composition | Silver |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
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| Reverse description | A small standing figure of the king faces left, positioned to the right of a fire altar; the king appears in a venerating posture consistent with Persis dynastic coinage. Aramaic inscriptions are arranged around the field, giving the royal titulature. The composition follows the standard Persis fire-altar reverse type, emphasizing the ruler's role as protector of the sacred flame. |
| Reverse script | Aramaic |
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| Additional information |
Persis — the heartland of the old Achaemenid empire in what is now Fars Province — maintained a remarkable degree of autonomy under Parthian overlordship, issuing its own coinage under a succession of local dynasts whose exact chronology remains disputed. Vahshir I is placed tentatively in the mid-first century AD, though some scholars argue for a later date based on stylistic comparisons with neighboring issues. The Alram 583 variant designation signals a die or iconographic deviation from the type specimen — in a series where many rulers are known from only a handful of examples, variants carry real numismatic weight.