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THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: KSHAHARATAS The Western Kshatrapas were probably a Scythian dynasty that ruled a large kingdom in western India from the 1st to the early 5th century. This dynasty produced a remarkably consistent series of silver coins from the beginning to the end of their rule. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: MYSORE, WODEYARS, LATE PERIOD Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (1799-1868) Krishna Raja Wodeyar (1799-1868): Gold pagoda Weight: 3.42 gm. Diameter: 11 mm Die axis: 1 o'clock Siva and Parvati seated facing, Siva holding a trisul (trident) and mriga (deer), sun and moon above THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: HERMAIOS Hermaios (also spelled Hermaues) was the last Greek king to rule in Gandhara and the Kabul valley. His kingdom must have been overrun by nomadic invaders from the north, the Yueh-Chih. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS Rudrasimha II was either a usurper, or had to step in because the main line of kshatrapas did not have an heir. His coins name Swami Jivadaman as his father, a name that clearly is not royal. He commenced his coinage in the year 226, which was the last year of Visvasena, suggesting that he followed his predecessor, rather than beginning to serve as kshatrapa while Visvasena was still alive. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: BHOPAL CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Bhopal state was founded in 1723 by Dost Mohammed Khan, an Afghan in Aurangzeb's army who took advantage of the period of confusion after Aurangzeb's death to carve out a kingdom for himself. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SULTANS OF GUJARAT The sultanate of Gujarat was established in 1396, when Zafar Khan, the viceroy of the Delhi Sultanate in Gujarat, declared independence at a time when matters were in a state of confusion in Delhi. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: DAMAZADA Dāmazāda II ("Damaghsada II" and "Damajadasri I") Dāmazāda II, as kshatrapa, silver drachm, "mint A" c. 160-170 CE Head of king right, blundered Greek legend around / THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: DIONYSIOS Dionysios: Hippostratos, AE obol or octuple unit Weight: 15.89 gm. Dimensions: 23 x 24 mm. Die axis: 12h Apollo standing right, holding arrow, monogram at left, THE COINS OF THE PĀRATARĀJAS The Coins of the Pāratarājas: A Synthesis Pankaj Tandon1 It seems fitting that, at a seminar organized to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Numismatic Society of India, I present a paper that offers a solution to a problem COIN INDIA: THE VIRTUAL MUSEUM OF INDIAN COINSPAGE 1500-1 BCE1-500 CEGANDHARAKUNTALAKURU The vast majority of coins in the name of Hermaios, which are available in large quantities, were imitations of that king's coins by these invading nomads. The earliest coins of the Kushan king Kujula Kadphises also name Hermaios and imitate his coins. The lifetime issues of Hermaios are in fact quite scarce, and some types are veryrare.
THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: KSHAHARATAS The Western Kshatrapas were probably a Scythian dynasty that ruled a large kingdom in western India from the 1st to the early 5th century. This dynasty produced a remarkably consistent series of silver coins from the beginning to the end of their rule. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: MYSORE, WODEYARS, LATE PERIOD Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (1799-1868) Krishna Raja Wodeyar (1799-1868): Gold pagoda Weight: 3.42 gm. Diameter: 11 mm Die axis: 1 o'clock Siva and Parvati seated facing, Siva holding a trisul (trident) and mriga (deer), sun and moon above THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: HERMAIOS Hermaios (also spelled Hermaues) was the last Greek king to rule in Gandhara and the Kabul valley. His kingdom must have been overrun by nomadic invaders from the north, the Yueh-Chih. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS Rudrasimha II was either a usurper, or had to step in because the main line of kshatrapas did not have an heir. His coins name Swami Jivadaman as his father, a name that clearly is not royal. He commenced his coinage in the year 226, which was the last year of Visvasena, suggesting that he followed his predecessor, rather than beginning to serve as kshatrapa while Visvasena was still alive. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: BHOPAL CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Bhopal state was founded in 1723 by Dost Mohammed Khan, an Afghan in Aurangzeb's army who took advantage of the period of confusion after Aurangzeb's death to carve out a kingdom for himself. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SULTANS OF GUJARAT The sultanate of Gujarat was established in 1396, when Zafar Khan, the viceroy of the Delhi Sultanate in Gujarat, declared independence at a time when matters were in a state of confusion in Delhi. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: DAMAZADA Dāmazāda II ("Damaghsada II" and "Damajadasri I") Dāmazāda II, as kshatrapa, silver drachm, "mint A" c. 160-170 CE Head of king right, blundered Greek legend around / THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: DIONYSIOS Dionysios: Hippostratos, AE obol or octuple unit Weight: 15.89 gm. Dimensions: 23 x 24 mm. Die axis: 12h Apollo standing right, holding arrow, monogram at left, THE COINS OF THE PĀRATARĀJAS The Coins of the Pāratarājas: A Synthesis Pankaj Tandon1 It seems fitting that, at a seminar organized to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Numismatic Society of India, I present a paper that offers a solution to a problem THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: LYSIAS CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. According to Bopearachchi, Lysias was the king to follow Zoilus I in the Paropamisadae, an area in what is now eastern Afghanistan in the area of Kabul and Kapisa. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: JAHANGIR Jahangir was the son of Akbar by his Rajput queen, Princess Jodhabai of Amber. Among the Mughal emperors, he was perhaps the greatest patron of the fine arts, in which he took a great personal interest. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: BENGAL SULTANATE CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. When Muhammad bin Sam established the Delhi Sultanate, his armies conquered the entire Ganges basin, all the way to Bengal, and coins began to be issued there in the name of the Delhi Sultan in 1203. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SHAKYA JANAPADA CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Silver 5-shana c. 600-450 BCE Weight: 7.00 gm., 25 x 23 mm. Single central pentagonal symbol/ THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: DELHI SULTANATE: KHALJI CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Jalal al-Din Firuz Khalji was the commander in chief of the army under Sultan Kaiqubad and took advantage of the chaos in the sultanate and the sultan's complete incompetence to seize power and establish the Khalji dynasty. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: BHADRAYASHA CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Bhadrayasha is regarded as an Indo-Scythian ruler, although his coins name Zoilus II and are stylistically very similar to the coins of the last "Indo-Greeks." THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: YUEH-CHI: ARSEILES Once again, the conventional name assigned to this ruler needs to be corrected. Mitchiner, for example, refers to this ruler as Agesiles. However, Senior has correctly THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SELEUCID: SELEUCOS I Bactria: Seleucid Seleucos I Silver Tetradrachm, c. 290 BCE Weight:16.87 gm., Diam:26 mm., Die axis:6h Diademed, bearded bust of Zeus right/ Athena driving elephant THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: GUPTA: SAMUDRAGUPTA Sceptre type ("Standard" type) Samudragupta, gold dinar, c. 335-375 CE Weight: 7.46 gm, Diameter: 20 mm. King standing left, sacrificing at altar left and holding the royal sceptre (rājadanda)Garuda standard at left, Brāhmī legend under arm: Samudra circular Brāhmī legendaround /
THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS After the gap of 16 years from S. 254-270 (336-348 CE), a king ascended the Kshatrapa throne again in 270. Rudrasena III names his father Mahakshatrapa Swami Rudradāman, but no such ruler issued coins, so it is not clear if he indeed was a mahakshatrapa.It is quite possible that the descendants of Yasodā man II continued the fiction of kingship and retained their titles, even as they were COIN INDIA: THE VIRTUAL MUSEUM OF INDIAN COINSPAGE 1500-1 BCE1-500 CEGANDHARAKUNTALAKURUANCIENT INDIA COINSINDIA COIN VALUESINDIA COIN VALUESINDIA COINS WORTH The vast majority of coins in the name of Hermaios, which are available in large quantities, were imitations of that king's coins by these invading nomads. The earliest coins of the Kushan king Kujula Kadphises also name Hermaios and imitate his coins. The lifetime issues of Hermaios are in fact quite scarce, and some types are veryrare.
THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: KSHAHARATAS The Western Kshatrapas were probably a Scythian dynasty that ruled a large kingdom in western India from the 1st to the early 5th century. This dynasty produced a remarkably consistent series of silver coins from the beginning to the end of their rule. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: MYSORE, WODEYARS, LATE PERIOD Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (1799-1868) Krishna Raja Wodeyar (1799-1868): Gold pagoda Weight: 3.42 gm. Diameter: 11 mm Die axis: 1 o'clock Siva and Parvati seated facing, Siva holding a trisul (trident) and mriga (deer), sun and moon above THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: HERMAIOS Hermaios (also spelled Hermaues) was the last Greek king to rule in Gandhara and the Kabul valley. His kingdom must have been overrun by nomadic invaders from the north, the Yueh-Chih. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS Rudrasimha II was either a usurper, or had to step in because the main line of kshatrapas did not have an heir. His coins name Swami Jivadaman as his father, a name that clearly is not royal. He commenced his coinage in the year 226, which was the last year of Visvasena, suggesting that he followed his predecessor, rather than beginning to serve as kshatrapa while Visvasena was still alive. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: BHOPAL CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Bhopal state was founded in 1723 by Dost Mohammed Khan, an Afghan in Aurangzeb's army who took advantage of the period of confusion after Aurangzeb's death to carve out a kingdom for himself. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SULTANS OF GUJARAT The sultanate of Gujarat was established in 1396, when Zafar Khan, the viceroy of the Delhi Sultanate in Gujarat, declared independence at a time when matters were in a state of confusion in Delhi. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: DAMAZADA Dāmazāda II ("Damaghsada II" and "Damajadasri I") Dāmazāda II, as kshatrapa, silver drachm, "mint A" c. 160-170 CE Head of king right, blundered Greek legend around / THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: DIONYSIOS Dionysios: Hippostratos, AE obol or octuple unit Weight: 15.89 gm. Dimensions: 23 x 24 mm. Die axis: 12h Apollo standing right, holding arrow, monogram at left, THE COINS OF THE PĀRATARĀJAS The Coins of the Pāratarājas: A Synthesis Pankaj Tandon1 It seems fitting that, at a seminar organized to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Numismatic Society of India, I present a paper that offers a solution to a problem COIN INDIA: THE VIRTUAL MUSEUM OF INDIAN COINSPAGE 1500-1 BCE1-500 CEGANDHARAKUNTALAKURUANCIENT INDIA COINSINDIA COIN VALUESINDIA COIN VALUESINDIA COINS WORTH The vast majority of coins in the name of Hermaios, which are available in large quantities, were imitations of that king's coins by these invading nomads. The earliest coins of the Kushan king Kujula Kadphises also name Hermaios and imitate his coins. The lifetime issues of Hermaios are in fact quite scarce, and some types are veryrare.
THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: KSHAHARATAS The Western Kshatrapas were probably a Scythian dynasty that ruled a large kingdom in western India from the 1st to the early 5th century. This dynasty produced a remarkably consistent series of silver coins from the beginning to the end of their rule. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: MYSORE, WODEYARS, LATE PERIOD Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (1799-1868) Krishna Raja Wodeyar (1799-1868): Gold pagoda Weight: 3.42 gm. Diameter: 11 mm Die axis: 1 o'clock Siva and Parvati seated facing, Siva holding a trisul (trident) and mriga (deer), sun and moon above THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: HERMAIOS Hermaios (also spelled Hermaues) was the last Greek king to rule in Gandhara and the Kabul valley. His kingdom must have been overrun by nomadic invaders from the north, the Yueh-Chih. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS Rudrasimha II was either a usurper, or had to step in because the main line of kshatrapas did not have an heir. His coins name Swami Jivadaman as his father, a name that clearly is not royal. He commenced his coinage in the year 226, which was the last year of Visvasena, suggesting that he followed his predecessor, rather than beginning to serve as kshatrapa while Visvasena was still alive. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: BHOPAL CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Bhopal state was founded in 1723 by Dost Mohammed Khan, an Afghan in Aurangzeb's army who took advantage of the period of confusion after Aurangzeb's death to carve out a kingdom for himself. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SULTANS OF GUJARAT The sultanate of Gujarat was established in 1396, when Zafar Khan, the viceroy of the Delhi Sultanate in Gujarat, declared independence at a time when matters were in a state of confusion in Delhi. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS: DAMAZADA Dāmazāda II ("Damaghsada II" and "Damajadasri I") Dāmazāda II, as kshatrapa, silver drachm, "mint A" c. 160-170 CE Head of king right, blundered Greek legend around / THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: DIONYSIOS Dionysios: Hippostratos, AE obol or octuple unit Weight: 15.89 gm. Dimensions: 23 x 24 mm. Die axis: 12h Apollo standing right, holding arrow, monogram at left, THE COINS OF THE PĀRATARĀJAS The Coins of the Pāratarājas: A Synthesis Pankaj Tandon1 It seems fitting that, at a seminar organized to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Numismatic Society of India, I present a paper that offers a solution to a problem THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: LYSIAS CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. According to Bopearachchi, Lysias was the king to follow Zoilus I in the Paropamisadae, an area in what is now eastern Afghanistan in the area of Kabul and Kapisa. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: JAHANGIR Jahangir was the son of Akbar by his Rajput queen, Princess Jodhabai of Amber. Among the Mughal emperors, he was perhaps the greatest patron of the fine arts, in which he took a great personal interest. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: BENGAL SULTANATE CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. When Muhammad bin Sam established the Delhi Sultanate, his armies conquered the entire Ganges basin, all the way to Bengal, and coins began to be issued there in the name of the Delhi Sultan in 1203. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SHAKYA JANAPADA CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Silver 5-shana c. 600-450 BCE Weight: 7.00 gm., 25 x 23 mm. Single central pentagonal symbol/ THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: DELHI SULTANATE: KHALJI CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Jalal al-Din Firuz Khalji was the commander in chief of the army under Sultan Kaiqubad and took advantage of the chaos in the sultanate and the sultan's complete incompetence to seize power and establish the Khalji dynasty. THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: INDO-GREEKS: BHADRAYASHA CoinIndia: History and Coins of India. Bhadrayasha is regarded as an Indo-Scythian ruler, although his coins name Zoilus II and are stylistically very similar to the coins of the last "Indo-Greeks." THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: YUEH-CHI: ARSEILES Once again, the conventional name assigned to this ruler needs to be corrected. Mitchiner, for example, refers to this ruler as Agesiles. However, Senior has correctly THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: SELEUCID: SELEUCOS I Bactria: Seleucid Seleucos I Silver Tetradrachm, c. 290 BCE Weight:16.87 gm., Diam:26 mm., Die axis:6h Diademed, bearded bust of Zeus right/ Athena driving elephant THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: GUPTA: SAMUDRAGUPTA Sceptre type ("Standard" type) Samudragupta, gold dinar, c. 335-375 CE Weight: 7.46 gm, Diameter: 20 mm. King standing left, sacrificing at altar left and holding the royal sceptre (rājadanda)Garuda standard at left, Brāhmī legend under arm: Samudra circular Brāhmī legendaround /
THE COININDIA COIN GALLERIES: WESTERN KSHATRAPAS After the gap of 16 years from S. 254-270 (336-348 CE), a king ascended the Kshatrapa throne again in 270. Rudrasena III names his father Mahakshatrapa Swami Rudradāman, but no such ruler issued coins, so it is not clear if he indeed was a mahakshatrapa.It is quite possible that the descendants of Yasodā man II continued the fiction of kingship and retained their titles, even as they were The Virtual Museum of Indian Coins -------------------------* About
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FEATURED COIN
HERMAIOS, SILVER DRACHM Weight: 2.38 gm. Diameter: 17 mm Die axis: 12h Queen (Calliope?) mounted on horse prancing right, Greek legendaround:
BAΣIΛEΩΣ ΣΩTHPOΣ EPMAIOY (Basileos Soteros Hermaiou ... _of King Hermaios, theSaviour_)
Zeus enthroned three-quarters left, holding sceptre in right hand and resting left arm on throne arm, Kharoshthi legend around: _maharajasa tratarasa / heramayasa Reference: MIG ---, Bop 6A_
Hermaios (also spelled Hermaues) was the last Greek king to rule in Gandhara and the Kabul valley. His kingdom must have been overrun by nomadic invaders from the north, the Yueh-Chih. These same nomadic tribes had swept through Bactria in the middle of the second century BCE, terminating Greek rule in that area, and now, in the early part of the first century BCE, they drove south over the Hindu Kush mountains and established their rule there also. The vast majority of coins in the name of Hermaios, which are available in large quantities, were imitations of that king's coins by these invading nomads. The earliest coins of the Kushan king Kujula Kadphises also name Hermaios and imitate his coins. The lifetime issues of Hermaios are in fact quite scarce, and some types are very rare. THIS COIN IS SOMETIMES DESCRIBED AS DEPICTING A KING ON A PRANCING HORSE, BUT THE SHAPE OF THE FIGURE'S TORSO (SEE DETAIL AT LEFT) QUITE CLEARLY INDICATES A FEMALE FORM. BOPEARACHCHI DESCRIBES THE FIGURE AS "REINE AMAZONE." IT SEEMS STRANGE THAT HERMAIOS WOULD PLACE AN AMAZON QUEEN ON HIS COINS. THE TYPE RECALLS THE PRANCING HORSE TYPE OF THE HERMAIOS COINS WITH CALLIOPE, ON WHICH THE FIGURE IS MALE, PRESUMABLY HERMAIOS HIMSELF. COULD THIS FIGURE REPRESENT CALLIOPE? PERHAPS SHE HAD DIED AND HERMAIOS MEMORIALIZED HER ON HIS COINS. You can see more coins of Hermaios on the Hermaios page . You can see the joint coins of Hermaios with Calliope on the Hermaios and Calliope page.
Previously featured coins can be seen in the Archive of Featured Coins.
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