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| 背面描述 | Reverse field displays multiple horizontal lines of Kufic Arabic inscription within a beaded circular border, mirroring the obverse layout typical of Abbasid sudaysi fractional coinage. The legends contain the customary Abbasid religious formulae and mint or ruler references arranged in stacked Kufic script. The flan is small and irregular, reflecting the fractional nature of this one-sixth dirham issue. Strike is characteristic of hammered provincial mint production of the early fourth century AH. |
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| 边缘 | Plain |
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| 附加信息 |
Al-Radi, who reigned from 934 to 940, was the last Abbasid caliph to compose poetry, deliver his own Friday sermons, and exercise anything resembling genuine political authority — after him, the office became ceremonial window dressing for whatever military strongman held Baghdad. The sudaysi, a sixth-dirham fraction, circulated in a monetary environment where the full dirham had debased so severely over the preceding century that small silver fractions were a practical necessity rather than a convenience.