By Jay Turner - June 10, 2026
|
Iran AH1249 (1834) Toman Isfahan Mint KM-766, PCGS MS61
Click image to enlarge.
|
Among Persian Islamic coinage, most issues carry designs that
feature only inscriptions. However, during the reign of Fath-Ali
Shah Qajar, some rare gold coins were issued featuring
the king’s portrait. Incredibly rare
and prized today, one such coin was
recently submitted to the PCGS office
in Paris for certification.
Those who study Islamic numismatics
are surely familiar with Aniconism
– a cultural avoidance or even a
prohibition of images, especially of
deities, prophets, and living people.
This is to prevent idolatry, with
conceptual representation replaced
by symbols, calligraphy, or abstract
patterns. This practice started in
the 690s AD for coinage of Islamic
rulers. This carried over to Persia
with the Islamic conquest. While there
are exceptions during some periods,
such as Ilkhanids with Mongol
influenced coinage, it wouldn’t
be until the Qajars that the first
Persian royal portraits would appear
on coinage for a short period during the Fath-Ali Shah
Qajar reign.
|
Iran AH1249 (1834) Toman Isfahan Mint KM-766, PCGS MS61
Click image to enlarge.
|
Fath-Ali Shah Qajar, who ruled between 1797 until 1834, was
a different ruler who liked to deliberately push the boundaries,
and this included matters relating to coinage. He looked to
the coinage of the Sasanian Empire, which featured royal
portraits, and felt that it would continue a historical legitimacy
and continuity with ancient Persian monarchy. As shah, he
had both political and religious
authority and saw his portrait as
state propaganda – a symbol of
sovereignty, not an object of worship.
As such, he would commission
paintings, murals, and other court art
with his image. This would include
some coins.
A rare example of one of these coins
was submitted to the PCGS on-site
grading event in Paris. The coin
features the image of the shah seated
on a throne with his name in cartouche
with the date 1249 (AH) (1834 AD).
The reverse has a Persian inscription
in cartouche, which reads “Isfahan
Palace Mint.” The coin was graded
MS61 by PCGS and is currently the
only example certified by the company.
After Fath-Ali Shah Qajar, successors
returned to not using portraits on coinage struck during their
reigns. A number of factors led to this, including a weaker royal
authority with a greater religious clerical influence and a move
away from European style, returning to Islamic tradition. This
is why the coinage featuring Fath-Ali Shah Qajar’s portrait is so
rare and prized today.
Article provided by PCGS at www.pcgs.com