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Dirham 'Ornamental type' - anepigraphic Bulghar mint

Issuer Golden Horde
Year 1280-1310
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Weight 1.29 g
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Obverse description Anepigraphic decorative field featuring a central stylized ornamental motif surrounded by a border of raised pellets arranged in a circular pattern. The design consists of an abstract geometric or foliate device rendered in low relief, characteristic of the ornamental dirham series struck at Bulghar. The flan is irregular and slightly convex, typical of hammered coinage of the Golden Horde period. No inscriptions or legends are present on this face. The overall composition reflects the decorative artistic tradition of the Bulghar mint during the late 13th to early 14th century.
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Edge Plain
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The "ornamental" or anepigraphic dirhams of the Bulghar mint occupy an odd corner of Golden Horde numismatics — coins struck without legible inscriptions at a time when the khanate was otherwise producing some of the most administratively sophisticated coinage in the medieval Islamic world. Whether the absence of text reflects a local workshop convention, a deliberately non-Islamic clientele in the Volga Bulgaria region, or simply a minting shorthand for low-denomination internal circulation remains debated. Bulghar itself was the dominant commercial hub of the northern Pontic steppe until Berke Khan's expansion of Sarai drew that role southward.

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