Saturday, July 3, 2010

Dinar & Dirham _ The Solution to the Coming World's Greatest Economic Crisis


Money: A History (Paperback)

by Catherine Eagleton, Jonathan Williams, Joe Cribb, Elizabeth Errington

ISBN-13: 978-1554072828

Publisher: Firefly Books (September 14, 2007)




Web Of Debt(3rd Edition)

Updated December 2008

by Ellen Hodgson Brown

ISBN-13: 978-0979560828

Publisher: Third Millenium Press




Gold: The Once and Future Money

by Nathan Lewis
Foreword by Addison Wiggin

ISBN-13: 978-0470047668

Publisher: Wiley (May 4, 2007)

Thursday, June 24, 2010

cAbasid dynasty, AH 171 / AD 787 Modern Iraq







The cAbasid caliph of Baghdad, Harun al-Rashid (reigned AD 786-809) ruled when the caliphate was at the peak of its prosperity and splendour. He was a fabled patron of the arts and literature, and is recalled as the ideal ruler in The Thousand and One Nights. His wife, Zubeyda, is equally famous for her pious works, particularly for the building of numerous pilgrim stations along the pilgrim route from Kufa (Iraq) to Mecca (Saudi Arabia). Harun al-Rashid is said to have exchanged ambassadors with Charlemagne, king of the Franks, and it is during his reign that Islamic silver coins started to find their way to Europe. This gold dinar is inscribed with the name Musa, a governor and finance director, at the base of the reverse area.

Sulayhid dynasty, AH 487 / AD 1094 Dhu Jibla, Yemen






This dinar was struck in the highlands of Yemen, ruled at the time by the Sulayhid dynasty (1047-1138). This coin was issued by Queen Arwa (died 1138), who took over power on the death of her husband Ahmad (reigned 1067–84). Despite her status, her name is not found on the coin, and she was only able to rule indirectly, through her officials. She was known as 'the younger queen of Sheba' (in Arabic 'Belqis'). A celebrated Yemeni poet Ali b. al-Qam (1050-1138) described Queen Arwa in the following verse:

'If one were to adore, after God, a human being, then that human would be you and none other,
And if your clothes were worn by Belqis then she would not fear Solomon nor would she fear David.'

The Sulyahids struck all of their coins in gold. Their dinars are characterized by inscriptions in the angular Kufic script. On the obverse (front) of this example is the Islamic profession of faith, the shahada, with the additional phrase 'Ali is the friend of God', indicating that the Sulayhids belong to the Shia branch of Islam. On the reverse of the coin is the phrase 'the king, the Sayyid' (denoting a link with the house of the Prophet Muhammad), 'al-Mukarram' (a Yemeni title), 'chief of the Arabs' (title) and the words 'Sultan under the Prince of the Faithful.'

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Injuyids. Abu Ishaq as independant ruler. AD 1337 to 1354. Silver Dirham.





Ruler: Al Mutawakkil Abu Ishaq ibn Mahamud, ruled at first as a vassel of the Ilkhan king Abu Said, but on Abu Said's death in AH 736 (AD 1337) Abu Ishaq became an independent, but this only lasted 18 years when he was driven out by the Muzaffarids.
Denomination: Silver Dirham.
Mint and Date: no mint or date is visible on this coin, which is normal for this very crudely struck type.
Reference: Album-2275.2, Mitchiner Islamic #1734.
Size: 19.0 x 19.1 mm.
Weight
: 3.57 grams.
Grade: VF for wear, but with the typical incomplete strike.
Obverse and reverse: Arabic inscriptions
.

Abbasid Caliphate. Al-Amih. AD 808 to 813. Silver Dirhem.





Denomination: Silver Dirhem.
Mint
: Bukhara.
Date: AH 193 (AD 808).
Reference: Album-221. MI 196 variety.
Size: 23.1 x 24.5 mm.
Weight
: 3.98 grams.
Grade: gVF for wear, but at some time there has been some cleaning, and there is some weak areas.
Obverse and Reverse: Arabic inscriptions.

Crusaders gold Dinar, imitating a Fatamid gold Dinar of al-Amir. Second Phase, ca. AD 1148 to 1187




Denomination: Gold Dinar (or Bezant).
Mint: The exact location of minting of this series is uncertain, but most likely it was the city of Acre.
Date: This coin is from the 2rd phase in this series, thought to have been struck between about AD 1148 and 1187.
Reference: Coinage in the Crusader States -page 116, #3 is the closest match. The prototype coin being imitated is a fatamid dinar of Al-Amir of Misr (Cairo), Album type 730.
Size: 21.0 x 21.8 mm.
Weight
: 3.48 grams.
Grade: aXF, with a fairly good strike.
Obverse and Reverse: Pseudo Arabic inscriptions, but are in part well enough engraved to be legible.