Dinars of Toghril Beg and Malik Shah
Great Seljuq dynasty, struck at al-Ahwaz (in
modern Iran), AH 448 / AD 1056-57 and Baghdad (Madinat al-Salam),
AH 485 / AD 1092
Toghril Beg (1040-63) was the first sultan of the Great Seljuq
dynasty, a Turkic tribe originating in the region of the Caspian
Sea. They ruled Persia, Iraq and Syria from 1040 to 1194. Seljuq
coinage is predominantly in gold. Toghril Beg's coins are
characterized by the use of tribal emblems, like a bow or a mace,
which appear on both sides of this example, and by the use of the
Persian title Shahanshah ('King of Kings').
Malik Shah (1073-92) was the third and most powerful of the
Seljuq sultans. Malik Shah's vizier was the well-known figure Nizam
al-Mulk, who created a strong and effective government and promoted
a structure of religious teaching along orthodox Sunni lines. The
court at Nishapur attracted scientists and writers from all over
the Islamic world including the Persian poet Omar Khayyam
(1048-1131), famous for his ruba'iyat (quatrains).
M. Broome, A handbook of Islamic coins (London, 1985)