Abdurahman Jami, born in 1414 in Khorasan, was the last of the great classical Persian poets and a prolific Sufi scholar whose works spread across Central Asia for centuries. Tajikistan has repeatedly issued commemorative coinage honoring figures from Persian literary tradition as part of a deliberate cultural policy — claiming shared heritage with pre-Soviet Persianate civilization at a moment when the young republic was still constructing its national identity. Jami died in Herat in 1492, the 600th anniversary of which falls in 2092, making 2014 an odd choice unless tied to an institutional or academic commemoration that year.
Abdurahman Jami, born in 1414 in Khorasan, was the last of the great classical Persian poets and a prolific Sufi scholar whose works spread across Central Asia for centuries. Tajikistan has repeatedly issued commemorative coinage honoring figures from Persian literary tradition as part of a deliberate cultural policy — claiming shared heritage with pre-Soviet Persianate civilization at a moment when the young republic was still constructing its national identity. Jami died in Herat in 1492, the 600th anniversary of which falls in 2092, making 2014 an odd choice unless tied to an institutional or academic commemoration that year.