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Hemidrachm of Khalid b. Barmak, AH 153

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Hemidrachm of Khalid b. Barmak, AH 153

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Original caption: ISLAMIC, 'Abbasid Caliphate. temp. Al-Mansur. AH 136-158 / AD 754-775. AR Hemidrachm (22mm, 1.81 g, 7h). Issue of Khalid ibn Barmak. Tabaristan mint. Dated PYE 119 = AH 153/4 (AD 770/1). Stylized crowned Sassanian style bust right; h’lyt in Pahlavi to right; ’pd in Pahlavi to lower right in outer margin / Fire altar flanked by attendants; pellets flanking flames; date to left, mint to right; alternating triple pellets and star-in-crescents in outer margin. Malek 59.1-3; Album 54; ICV 103. Near EF.

The Sasanian Empire (224 – 651 CE, also given as Sassanian, Sasanid, or Sassanid) was the last pre-Islamic Persian empire, established in 224 CE by Ardeshir I, son of Papak, a descendant of Sasan. Zoroastrianism was the state religion, and at various times followers of other faiths suffered religious persecution. The Empire lasted until 651 CE when it was overthrown by the Arab Rashidun Caliphate. It is considered by the Iranian people to be a highlight of their civilization for, after the fall of the Achaemenid Empire (c. 550 –330 BCE) at the hands of Alexander the Great in 330 BCE, Persian culture was sustained through the Parthian Empire (247 BCE – 224 CE) and reached its height in the Sassanian Period; there was not to be another state that truly felt ”Iranian" after its fall.

Dirham is a currency used in several countries, including Morocco, United Arab Emirates, and several other countries in the Middle East and North Africa. The name "dirham" is derived from the Greek word "drachma," which was an ancient currency used in the Mediterranean region.

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0770
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