Islamic, Marinid Dyasty, gold ¼ Dinar 1244-1258, North Africa (al-Maghreb)

Sultan Abu Yahya ibn Abd al-Haqq (1244-1258)

Islamic, Marinid Dyasty, gold ¼ Dinar 1244-1258, North Africa (al-Maghreb)
Islamic, Marinid Dyasty, gold ¼ Dinar 1244-1258, North Africa (al-Maghreb)
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Article code25-4502
Islamic, Marinid Dynasty, Abu Yahya ibn Abd al-Haqq (AD 1244-1258), gold ¼ dinar, North Africa, al-Maghreb (Morocco).

Both faces bear Arabic inscriptions arranged within linear and rectangular fields, characteristic of western Islamic coinage of the period. The coin has a compact, slightly irregular hammered fabric and a well-preserved rich gold tone.

Diameter: ± 15,5 mm
Weight: ± 1,19 g
Ref: Hazard 705; Album 522
F/VF
1
The Marinid Dynasty was a Berber ruling house of the Zenata tribal confederation that rose to power in Morocco during the 13th century and controlled much of the western Maghreb until the 15th century. They succeeded the Almohads and established Fez as a major political and cultural centre. Under the Marinids, Morocco became an important hub of trade, scholarship and architecture, and the dynasty is especially remembered for its refined Islamic art, madrasas and gold coinage, which continued the strong monetary traditions of the medieval western Islamic world.

Abu Yahya ibn Abd al-Haqq was one of the early Marinid rulers and played a key role in the rise of the Dynasty during the mid-13th century. Reigning from 1244 to 1258, he consolidated Marinid authority in Morocco at a time when Almohad power was weakening, helping to lay the foundations for later Marinid expansion. His rule belongs to the formative phase of the Dynasty, when its political identity and monetary issues were becoming more firmly established.

Features and Specifications

Period Middle Ages
Category Coins
Material Gold
Country Islamic world

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