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Tony Goodwin
The coinage of Syria and Palestine issued during the first fifty
years of Islamic rule is of exceptional interest, but until recently
has been little studied. The images on the coins were initially
loosely based on Byzantine prototypes, but soon developed new iconographic
features, including the earliest known Islamic images.
This development was cut short by caliph 'Abd al-Malik's reforms
of the 690s AD in which purely epigraphic coinage was introduced
across almost the whole Muslim world. Arab-Byzantine coins are therefore
an almost unique survival of the birth of Islamic art, but they
also have potential as useful historical documents given that the
earliest surviving histories of this period were written some two
hundred years later.
The book starts with a comprehensive survey of the coinage, with
examples of all known mints and types illustrated and described.
The author then presents three separate in-depth studies, on the
coins of Ba'albak, Jerusalem and Yubna. The first of these includes
the results of first comprehensive die study to be published for
an Arab-Byzantine mint.
The second and third studies concentrate particularly on the unusual
iconography which developed in the Palestinian mints and the author
also demonstrates how the Yubna coinage, hitherto practically unknown
outside specialist numismatic circles, must now be regarded as one
of the most complex in the Arab-Byzantine series.
The studies draw on the extensive holdings of the Nasser D. Khalili
Collection of Islamic Art and also on Museum and private collections
across the world. The book is extensively illustrated with images
of around four hundred coins, almost all of which are previously
unpublished. It is aimed both at numismatists and at interested
scholars and collectors from other disciplines.
DETAILS
168 pages
39.7x 21.0 cm
hardback
2005
1-874780-75-7
£23 $46
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