ND - Legend around tamgha -
ND (401-501) - Dots around tamgha -
附加信息
Choresmian coinage of the middle period sits in one of the more poorly documented stretches of Central Asian numismatic history — the region's political fragmentation between the decline of Kushan influence and the consolidation preceding the Arab conquest leaves attribution work largely dependent on typological grouping rather than contemporary written sources. Sijawsparsh himself is known primarily through the coins; the name appears in Vainberg's classification but attaches to no independently confirmed ruler in the historical record.
The Zeno catalog entry remains one of very few documented specimens of this specific subtype.
Choresmian coinage of the middle period sits in one of the more poorly documented stretches of Central Asian numismatic history — the region's political fragmentation between the decline of Kushan influence and the consolidation preceding the Arab conquest leaves attribution work largely dependent on typological grouping rather than contemporary written sources. Sijawsparsh himself is known primarily through the coins; the name appears in Vainberg's classification but attaches to no independently confirmed ruler in the historical record.
The Zeno catalog entry remains one of very few documented specimens of this specific subtype.