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Almoravid Dynasty
Tashfin Ibn Ali
Gold Dinar
穆拉比特王朝
塔什芬·本·阿里
金第納爾
Item number: A1243
Year: AD 1142-1145
Material: Gold
Size: 25.6 x 24.7 mm
Weight: 4.14 g
Provenance: Spink 2024
This is a Dinar gold coin minted during the reign of the Almoravid dynasty, which once spanned the Maghreb region of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. It was issued under the rule of Emir Tashfin ibn Ali, who governed from AD 1142 to AD 1145.
The obverse design of the gold coin features two concentric circles, inscribed with a local variant of Arabic Kufic script known as Maghrebi. At the centre is the Shahada, the Islamic declaration of faith: “لا اله الا الله محمد رسول الله” (“There is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah”). Below this inscription is the title and name of Emir Tashfin ibn Ali.
The surrounding circular inscription contains a verse from the Qur’an (3:85): “وَمَنۡ يَّبۡتَغِ غَيۡرَ الۡاِسۡلَامِ دِيۡنًا فَلَنۡ يُّقۡبَلَ مِنۡهُ وَهُوَ فِى الۡاٰخِرَةِ مِنَ الۡخٰسِرِيۡنَ” (“And whoever seeks a way other than submission (Islam), it will not be accepted from him, and in the Hereafter, he will be among the losers”).
The reverse side of the coin also features a design of two concentric circles. At the centre, it bears the standard inscriptions found on Almoravid dinars: “الامام” (Al-Imam), “عبد الله” (Abd Allah), and “أمير المؤمنين” (Commander of the Faithful), titles that emphasise the ruler’s religious authority. The outer circular inscription states that the coin was minted in the name of Allah in Aghmat, a significant commercial city of the Berbers in North Africa, and marks the coin’s minting year according to the Islamic Hijri calendar.
The Almoravid dynasty was an Islamic empire established by the Sanhaja Berbers of North Africa in the 11th century. At its peak, the dynasty controlled the Maghreb region of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. Due to its dominance over the trans-Saharan gold trade, which linked West Africa with the Mediterranean, the Almoravid dinar became widely accepted in both Europe and the Islamic world.
However, by the time Tashfin ibn Ali ascended the throne in AD 1142, the Almoravid dynasty was facing the rising challenge of the Almohad dynasty, founded by the Masmuda Berbers. In AD 1145, Tashfin ibn Ali was besieged by Almohad forces in Oran, Algeria. While attempting to escape on horseback towards the sea, he fell from a cliff and died. Following his death, internal succession disputes weakened the Almoravids, and in AD 1147, the Almohad dynasty successfully overthrew the Almoravid dynasty.
金幣正面設計為兩道同心圓,以本土化的阿拉伯庫法書法變體「馬格里布體」,於正中央打印穆斯林熟悉的清真言禱詞「لا اله الا الله محمد رسول الله」即「萬物非主,唯有真主,穆罕默德是真主唯一的使者」,下半段則是塔什芬·本·阿里的埃米爾頭銜和名諱。外圍的環形銘文「وَمَنۡ يَّبۡتَغِ غَيۡرَ الۡاِسۡلَامِ دِيۡنًا فَلَنۡ يُّقۡبَلَ مِنۡهُ وَهُوَ فِى الۡاٰخِرَةِ مِنَ الۡخٰسِرِيۡنَ」,出自《古蘭經3:85》:「捨伊斯蘭教而尋求別的宗教的人,他所尋求的宗教,絕不被接受,他在後世,是虧折的」。
Ronald A. Messier, “The Almoravids: West African Gold and the Gold Currency of the Mediterranean Basin,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 1974, pp. 31-47
Ronald A. Messier, “Quantitative Analysis of Almoravid Dinars,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 1980, pp. 102-118