The Strandby Hoard / The silver coins / Arabic Dirhem coins

Arabic Dirhem coins

VHM0350 X069
Dirhem Arabisk
ca. efter år 815
 
VHM0350 X072
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X073
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X074
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X110
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X126
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X139
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X142
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X157
Dirhem Samanid type c Arabisk år 892 - 942
 
VHM0350 X158
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X186
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
 
VHM0350 X187
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
VHM0350 X195
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
 
VHM0350 X204
Dirhem , Arabisk Efter ca. år 750-
 
VHM0350 X212
Dirhem type C, Arabisk år 815 -
 
 
ID på ovennævnte mønter er foreslået ID, Endeligt ID følger når mønterne er færdigbehandlet af Nationalmuseets mønteksperter.

ARABIC DIRHEMS

These coins were found by the thousands in the North, e.g. in large treasure finds in Sweden. They have been a natural part of the silver economy in the large trade area of the Vikings.

The coins are “living” proof of how far these trade routes extended more than 1000 years ago. Many of the coins are from the area east of the Caspian Sea and the Aral Sea, an area which is now called Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan and Northern Iran.

In the Viking Age people in Denmark had no idea what the strange symbols on the coins meant, but they were reasonably convinced that said coins were made of good silver. People have not always trusted the merchants who brought these coins to the markets, however, and that is why many of the coins sport so called proof marks, which are little scratches in the coins made to judge the silver’s density. The coins were also weighed to determine their value.

These coins were, along with other pieces of hack silver, the primary method of payment at the time.

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