Azes I founded the Azes Era — a calendrical system whose epoch is still debated, with scholars placing it variously between 58 and 47 BC — and his coinage was instrumental in spreading that reckoning across the northwestern subcontinent. The sheer volume of his silver output, minted at multiple workshops across the Indus region, reflects a ruler who understood that coin production was administrative infrastructure. His types deliberately echoed Parthian and late Bactrian weight standards to ease commercial exchange across fractious regional borders.
Senior 76.3 belongs to a bilingual series carrying Greek on one face and Kharoshthi on the other, a practice inherited from the Indo-Greek kings Azes displaced. The specific die pairing referenced here is among the more frequently encountered in collections, yet clean examples without test cuts are not trivial to find.
Azes I founded the Azes Era — a calendrical system whose epoch is still debated, with scholars placing it variously between 58 and 47 BC — and his coinage was instrumental in spreading that reckoning across the northwestern subcontinent. The sheer volume of his silver output, minted at multiple workshops across the Indus region, reflects a ruler who understood that coin production was administrative infrastructure. His types deliberately echoed Parthian and late Bactrian weight standards to ease commercial exchange across fractious regional borders.
Senior 76.3 belongs to a bilingual series carrying Greek on one face and Kharoshthi on the other, a practice inherited from the Indo-Greek kings Azes displaced. The specific die pairing referenced here is among the more frequently encountered in collections, yet clean examples without test cuts are not trivial to find.