| Emittente |
Western Satraps
(Indo-Scythian Kingdom) |
|---|---|
| Tipo | Moneta di circolazione regolare |
| Anni | 87-99 |
| Valore | 1 Drachm |
| Valuta | Dracma (35-405) |
| Composizione | Argento |
| Peso | 1.78 g |
| Diametro | 14.78 mm |
| Spessore | 1.5 mm |
| Forma | Rotonda (irregolare) |
| Tecnica | Martellato |
| Orientamento | Allineamento variabile ↺ |
| Demonetizzato | Sì |
| Numero | N# 580714 |
| Referenze | AMF# 10.1, 10.2 Alexander M. Fishman; 2013. The Silver Coinage of the Western Satraps in India (50-400 AD): Catalogue and Rarity Guide. Self-published, Charleston, South Carolina, United States. |
Testa di re a destra, legenda greca abbozzata intorno.
Chaitya (collina a tre arcate), fiume in basso, luna crescente e sole in alto, leggenda Brahmi intorno.
Scrittura: Brahmi
Scritta: Rajno Mahaksatrapasa Rudradamaputrasa Rajno Ksatrapasa DamaGhsaDasa
Info and reference images below - credited to - The Silver Coinage of the Western Satraps in India, A. M. Fishman (AMF); a popular acronym for the book is SCWS
Damajadasri was successor of Rudradaman. Two spellings of his name appear on his silver coins, Damajadasri from Mint A and Damaghasada from Mint B, both used on his Kshatrap and Makshatrap coins.
this catalog entry is for coins from “Mint B” - refer Note from Pankaj Tandon at the bottom
Damajadasri I as Kshatrap
OP Coin
SCWS #10.1 (before c.87 SE/ before ca.165 AD) Mint B
Obv: Bust of King with corrupt Greek legend around
Rev: Rajno Mahaksatrapasa Rudradamaputrasa Rajno Ksatrapasa DamaGhsaDasa
Sketch of reverse, legend indicating issue of Mint B name of king spelled DamaGhasaDasa
SCWS #10.2 (ca.87-99 SE/ ca.165-177 AD) Mint B
Obv: Bust of King with corrupt Greek legend around
Rev: Rajno Mahaksatrapasa Rudradamaputrasa Rajno Mahaksatrapasa DamaGhsaDasa
Sketch of reverse, legend indicating issue of Mint B name of king spelled DamaGhasaDasa
note from CoinIndia regarding name variations - Pankaj Tandon
In the current catalogs of Western Kshatrapa coins, such as Jha & Rajgor and Senior, Rudradāman I is shown as having three sons who ruled after him. They are called Damajadasri, Damaghsada and Rudrasimha. However, there has been a long-standing proposal (Indraji, JRAS 1890 and Rapson's BM catalogue) that the coins of "Damajadasri" and "Damaghsada" are actually issues of just one king, whose name was in reality Dāmazāda, and I believe I have confirmed this in my paper The Western Kshatrapa Dāmazāda in the 2009 issue of The Numismatic Chronicle. The theory I have offered to explain the different spellings is that they were produced at different mints. The key point is that Brahmi did not have a letter for the Persian sound z and different mints used different conventions on how to represent it.
Per favore accedi o crea un account per gestire la tua raccolta.
| Data | D | B | MB | BB | SPL | FDC | Referenze | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indeterminata | |||||||||||||||
| ? | AMF# 10.1 Alexander M. Fishman; 2013. The Silver Coinage of the Western Satraps in India (50-400 AD): Catalogue and Rarity Guide. Self-published, Charleston, South Carolina, United States. |
(en) as Kshatrap Damaghasadasa; before SE 87 | |||||||||||||
| ND (87-99) | AMF# 10.2 Alexander M. Fishman; 2013. The Silver Coinage of the Western Satraps in India (50-400 AD): Catalogue and Rarity Guide. Self-published, Charleston, South Carolina, United States. |
(en) as Mahakshatrap Damaghasadasa | |||||||||||||
Nessun membro di questo sito attualmente desidera scambiarla.