Iran AH 115x rupi KM-398
The Afsharids were of Turkic origin, and the dynasty was founded by Nadir Shah when he deposed the last ruler of the Safavid Dynasty in 1736 AD. He expanded Persian rule to areas previously lost to the Ghilzai Afghans in the east and to the Ottomans in the west. However, he was assassinated in 1747 AD and thereafter the dynasty carried on in a weakened state, with various claimants who eventually split off, the most important being the establishment of the Durrani Empire in Khorasan. This region eventually became part of modern-day Afghanistan. The last Afsharid ruler was captured by Mohammad Khan Qajar, who established the Qajar Dynasty in 1796 AD.
The specimen shown was lot 701 in Steve Album sale 16 (Santa Rosa, CA, May 2013), where it did not sell. The catalog description reads[1]: "AFSHARID: Nadir Shah, 1735-1747, AR rupi, Sind, AH115x, without khalad Allah mulkahu, bold strike, one small testmark, VF to EF."
Recorded mintage: unknown.
Specification: 11.51 g, silver.
Catalog reference: KM 398, A-2744.1.
- Album, Stephen. Checklist of Islamic Coins. Santa Rosa, 1998. Stephen Album.
- [1]Album, Stephen. Stephen Album Rare Coins - Auction 16. Santa Rosa, 2013. Stephen Album Rare Coins.
- Mitchiner, Michael. Oriental Coins and their Values - The World of Islam. London, 2000. Hawkins Publications.
- Michael, Thomas, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1701-1800, 7th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2016.
Link to:
- Iran (1722) rupi KM-323 Qandahar mint
- AH 1148 abbasi, Mazandaran mint
- AH 1150 (1737) abbasi, Tabriz mint
- AH 1150 6 shahi
- AH 1149 1 abbasi
- AH 1150 (1737) abbasi, Mashhad mint
- AH 1150 1 abbasi
- AH 1152 ashrafi, Tiflis mint
- AH 1153 rupi, Bhakhar mint
- AH 1153 rupi, Nadirabad mint
- AH 1154 (1741) rupi, Dagestan mint
- AH 1154 (1741) rupi, Tabriz mint
- AH 1155 rupi, Herat mint, Shahrokh, viceroy
- AH 1156 rupi, Isfahan mint
- return to coins of Iran