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    COINAGE AND HISTORY IN THE

    SEVENTH CENTURY NEAR EAST

    2

    EDITED BY

    ANDREW ODDY

    Proceedings of the 12th Seventh Century Syrian

    Numismatic Round Table

    held at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge

    on 4th

     and 5th

     April 2009

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      ii

     

    Published in 2010 by the Seventh Century Syrian Numismatic Round table, an informal group of

    numismatists and historians whose convenors are Tony Goodwin ([email protected]),

    Andrew Oddy ([email protected]), and Marcus Phillips and Susan Tyler-Smith

    ([email protected]).

    © 2010: Copyright is held by the individual authors.

    Produced and Distributed by Archetype Publications Ltd, 6 Fitzroy Square, London W1T 5HJ

    www.archetype.co.uk

    Printed by MPG Biddles Ltd, 24 Rollesby Road, Hardwick Industrial Estate, King’s Lynn, Norfolk

    PE30 4LS

    ISBN 9781904982623

    The publication of this volume has been made possible by generous grants fromTony Goodwin, Ingrid and Wolfgang Schulze, The Royal Numismatic Society, TheUK Numismatic Trust and the Samir Shamma Fund of Oxford University. The

    convenors are extremely grateful to them and to the advertisers:A H Baldwin & Sons Ltd, London

    Jean Elsen & ses Fils s.a., BrusselsMorton and Eden Ltd, LondonSimmons Gallery Ltd, London

    Tim Wilkes, Sussex

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      iii

     

    CONTENTS

    Preface iv

     

    The Rise of Islam and Byzantium’s Response

    James Howard-Johnston 1

     

    Symbolism on the Syrian Standing Caliph Copper Coins: A contribution to the discussion

    Wolfgang Schulze 11

    The Standing Caliph Type – the object on the reverse

    Stefan Heidemann 23

    Die Links between Standing Caliph Mints in Jund Qinnasr ī n

    Tony Goodwin 35

    A Standing Caliph Fals Issued by ‘Abd al-Rahmān at Sarm ī n

    Tony Goodwin 41

    New Fakes of Standing Caliph Coins

    Ingrid Schulze 45

    Heraclean Folles of Jerusalem

    Steve Mansfield 49

    New Evidence for Coin Circulation in Byzantine and Early Islamic Egypt

    Tasha Vorderstrasse 57

    The Single Standing Figure Type of Tiberias/Tabariya

    Marcus Phillips 61

    More about the coinage in Syria under Persian rule (610-630) (summary)

    Henri Pottier 79

     

    Numismatics and the History of early Islamic Syria

    Robert G. Hoyland 81

    Constantine IV as a Prototype for Early Islamic Coins

    Andrew Oddy 95

    The al-waf ā lillāh Coinage: A study of style (work in progress)

    Ingrid Schulze 111

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      iv

    PREFACE

    This volume contains all but one of the papers presented at the 12th

     meeting of the Seventh Century

    Syrian Numismatic Round Table held in Cambridge in April 2009. The Round Table is a forum for

    the presentation of new, and not always complete, research, and, as such, for many years was not

    formally published. Many of the papers given at these meetings were subsequently published in the

     Newsletter, subsequently the  Journal of the Oriental Numismatic Society. In fact, the first six

    meetings at the British Museum in April 1992, July 1993, December 1995, December 1996, April

    1998, March 2000 were held under the auspices of the Oriental Numismatic Society. By the London

    meeting of March 2000, however, the Round Table was operating independently and went on to

    hold the next meeting, also in London, in October 2001. The meeting of November 2002 was held

    in Birmingham and was spread over two days, as have been all the subsequent meetings in

    November 2003 at Oxford, April 2005 in Cambridge, May 2007 in Birmingham, and the meeting

    reported here in Cambridge.

    The study of the so-called Arab-Byzantine coinage struck in Syria (modern Syria, Lebanon, Israel,

    The Palestinian Territories and Jordan) has made great strides forward in the last 30 years with thepublication of catalogues of collections in the Ahli Bank in Amman, the Ashmolean Museum in

    Oxford, the Khalili Collection in London, the Dumbarton Oaks Collection in Washington DC, and

    the University Collection in Tübingen. These monographs, together with innumerable papers in

     journals, have revolutionised the study of the coinage struck in Syria following the fall of the

    Byzantine Empire in that region. Most rewarding is the increasing attempts to relate the coins to the

    known history of the early Islamic State and the Umayyad Empire.

    Not least, a number of die studies have shown that the coinages of Scythopolis/Baisan, Baalbek,

    Emesa/Hims, and pseudo-Damascus were prolific and clearly produced in well organised mints.

    For instance, only a few years ago the coins of Scythopolis were regarded as very rare with only

    about 30 recorded. Now that number is well into three figures with new specimens appearing all

    the time.

    Of course, the growing popularity of Arab-Byzantine coins has its downside in the appearance of

    modern forgeries, as exemplified by one paper in this volume. Forgeries of the earliest Islamic gold

    dinars have been known for decades, but now numismatists are having to contend with modern

    copies of bronze coins, and very convincing some of them are too.

    The one great lacuna in the subject is the dearth of coins from excavations or with secure

    provenances as a result of field walking. Sadly, most coins available for study can only be localised

    according to the origin of the dealer offering specimens for sale, and that is far from reliable as the

    number of Arab-Byzantine coins currently offered by a dealer in Dubai testifies. Hence it is not

    safe to assume that coins have not crossed modern frontiers before being offered for sale in Europe

    or the USA.

    On a practical note, I must express my heartfelt thanks to Ingrid and Wolfgang Schulze who

    carefully read the ‘final’ text and discovered numerous mistakes and inconsistencies. Those that

    remain are the fault of the editor.

    Andrew Oddy 28 June 2010

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    A. Oddy (ed.): Coinage and History in the Seventh Century Near East II, Proceedings of the 12 th

    Seventh Century Syrian Numismatic Round Table held at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge

    on 4th and 5th April 2009 (2010), pp. 11 - 21

    Symbolism on the Syrian Standing Caliph Copper Coins

    A contribution to the discussion

    Wolfgang Schulze1

     Fig. 1

    In the early 690s (AH 70s) – more than 50 years after the Arab conquest of Syria – ‘Abd al-Malik 

    (685-705 – 65-86 AH) introduced fiscal, administrative and military reforms and religious policies.

    In many respects he founded the Muslim state itself.

    One of his reforms was the introduction of the Standing Caliph coinage in gold and copper. For the

    first time in seventh century Syria we see a standardisation at 18 known mints – evidently

    supervised by a central administration – sharing Islamic images and legends throughout. This was

    the first experimental and short-lived money reform of ‘Abd al-Malik. It was followed by the

    second reform at the end of the seventh century introducing purely epigraphic coins.

    The Standing Caliph coins show a lot of new features of which the symbol on steps on the reverse is

    the most prominent. We find the symbol on steps mainly in two forms:

    •  a small globe on a staff on the gold coins2 and

    •  a circle or ellipse on a staff on the copper coins, usually with an additional globe above.

    Besides the symbol on steps at most mints, there are also the traditional cursive m (for follis) on thereverses of the Standing Caliph coins of the jund Filastin (Iliya, Yubna and Ludd) and a capital M

    on a Standing Caliph coin attributed to Amman and on a twin Caliph coin attributed to Baisan or 

    Jerash

    3

    .

    Before developing some new ideas concerning the symbol on steps I will briefly present the main

    theories that have been published so far.4

     

    1 Wolfgang Schulze is an independent scholar. [email protected] The earlier Arab imitations of Byzantine gold coins are not discussed here.3 A Oddy, The Twin Caliph Fals, ONS Newsletter   179 (2004) 10 f.; C Foss , Arab-Byzantine Coins, An introduction,with a Catalogue of the Dumbarton Oaks Collection , Washington DC, 2008, 60 f.4 The theory of André GRABAR ( L’Iconoclasme byzantin, Paris, 1957, p.75), reading the symbol on steps as the Greek 

    letter theta for Theos = god, can be dismissed as well as the theory of Volker Popp (‘Die frühe Islamgeschichte nach

    inschriftlichen und numismatischen Zeugnissen’, in: K-H Ohlig and G Puin, eds., Die dunklen Anfänge , 2nd edition,Berlin, 2006, 70) interpreting the symbol on steps as Beth-El (house of god) in the form of the jegar-sahaduta (pile of 

    testimony), the Aramaic name which Laban gave to the pile of stones erected as a memorial of the covenant betweenhim and Jacob (Genesis 31:47).

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    John Walker in his ground-breaking book about the Arab-Byzantine coinage was very cautious

    about interpreting the symbol. He only remarked that it resembles the Greek letter  phi.5 Furthermore

    he saw the possibility that it is a transformed cross on steps “borrowed” from a reverse type of a

    Byzantine solidus. But he was not convinced and put the words “cross on steps” in parentheses.

     Nevertheless the idea of the transformed cross on steps imitating Byzantine prototypes found its

    way into the numismatic literature and remained there for long-time6, although the meaning of the

    symbol on steps, which does not look like a cross, remained unclear. In other words, the Christiancross was transformed, but into what? Or was there no “transformation” and did the Arabs invent

    their own symbolism?

    To follow this line of thought I will start with a quotation from Chase Robinson:

    “ ‘Abd al-Maliks intense (and short lived) period of experimentation in design, which began with

    the “standing caliph” issues and ended with the purely epigraphic coins of the reform shows that the

    Marwanids were now pressing coinage into service for ideological purposes.”7  Following this

     premise and the consequent idea that the Standing Caliph coins were the first coins with purely

    Arabic symbolism, we should not classify them as “Arab-Byzantine” but we must seek a new - that

    means “Arabic” - interpretation of what we are seeing on them.

    Elizabeth Savage was the first to dismiss the old theory of the transformed cross on steps derived

    from Byzantine prototypes. She interpreted the pole on steps on the gold coins as ‘anazah on steps,

    the spear of the prophet symbolizing the supreme authority of the Muslims’ God. On the copper 

    coins she saw the symbol on steps as spear and shield.8 Nadia Jamil, however, has tried to interpret

    the symbol on steps using Islamic poetry. She thinks that the Byzantine cross on steps was

    transformed by ‘Abd al-Malik into the qut   b,   a very complicated, polyvalent concept of the Islamic

    world view. The pole is seen as a spear surrounded by an ellipse symbolising the central, religious

    authority of the caliph.9

    For both these interpretations of Savage and Jamil I concur with the comment of Tony Goodwin:

    “They have their attractions and are certainly more convincing than the old ‘not a cross’

    interpretation. However, neither author has been able to produce convincing evidence,

    documentary, archaeological or in the form of other contemporary artefacts, to support their case.” 10

    Possibly both interpretations are too complicated to be understood by the contemporary population

    having the coins in their hands. If the Standing Caliph coins were meant to be a medium for 

    disseminating Islamic ideology, then that ideology had to be clear and evident for everyone. The

    symbol on steps was even more important than the shahāda written around the circumference of the

    coin. The interpretation of both authors as spear is not convincing. Why was the spear not clearly

     pictured as on a contemporary Arab-Sasanian coin, the so called mihr ā b and ‘anazah dirham? Apart

     

    5 J Walker, A Catalogue of the Arab-Byzantine and Post-Rreform Umaiyad coins, (A catalogue of the Muhammadan

    coins in the British Museum), vol. II, London, 1956, xxiii and xxxii. Recently Stefan Heidemann has revived this

    association in a German exhibition catalogue ( Die Kunst der frühen Christen in Syrien, Mainz, 2008, 205) interpretingthe symbol possibly as a declaration of value for fals/fulus.6 See, for example P Grierson, ‘The Monetary Reforms of ‘Abd al-Malik’, JESHO 3 (1960) 246 and Byzantine Coins,Berkely and Los Angeles, 1982, 146; G C Miles, ‘The Earliest Arab Gold Coinage’, ANS MN  13 (1967) 215.7 C F Robinson, Empire and Elite after the Muslim Conquest , Cambridge, 2000, 52; cf. also ‘Abd al-Malik , Oxford,2005, 49 ff.8 E Savage, ‘Arab-Byzantine Symbols of Victory’, unpublished paper given to the Royal Numismatic Society, London,

    1996.9 N Jamil, ‘Caliph and Qut   b. Poetry as a source for interpreting the Byzantine cross on steps on Umayyad coinage’, in: J

    Johns, ed., Bayt Al-Maqdis. Jerusalem and Early Islam, (Oxford Studies in Islamic Art IX, Part two), Oxford, 1999,11-5710

     S Album and T Goodwin, Sylloge of Islamic coins in the Ashmolean, vol. 1, The Pre-Reform coinage of the early Islamic period , Oxford, 2002, 93

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    from this we can suggest other problems with Jamil’s numismatic interpretation. She is referring to

    two Standing Caliph copper coins, published by Walker.11

     Fig. 2

    At first glance these coins clearly show a spear. But compared with other coins of this series it is

    evident that the spearhead is nothing else other than the letters lam-alif of the margin legend. Due to

    the fact that the die cutter started the shahāda at 12 o’clock instead of the normal 1 o’clock, the

    ligature found its place at the top of the pole.

      Fig. 3. Aleppo. lam-alif at 12 o‘clock Fig. 4. Aleppo. lam-alif at 1 o‘clock 

    It is interesting to observe that there is a small series of irregular Damascus Standing Caliph coins

    showing different decorations at the top of the staff – not spearheads.

     Figs. 5-8

    Summarising so far, we have no convincing explanation for the symbol on steps. The following

    reflections take into account three main premises:

    First, within the framework of the administrative reforms of ‘Abd al-Malik, Christian symbols were

     banned from public life. About 60 years after the death of Muhammad in 632, and following

    decades of religious tolerance in conquered Syria after 636, Islam developed gradually and – mainly

    for political reasons – became more important for the government. The introduction of the Standing

    Caliph coins is an example for this development. But we have other evidence too. Another 

    interesting example can be found in the Roman/Byzantine settlement of Umm al-Rasas (Kastron

    Mefaa) situated about 30 kilometres south-east of Madaba in Jordan. On a mosaic in the church of 

     bishop Sergius, dating from the end of the 6th century, we recognize a cross on steps on a public

    monument (Fig. 9), whereas on a mosaic of the church of Saint Stephen (Fig. 10) dating from the

    middle of the 8th century, the cross has been removed from the same monument.12

     11 Walker, op. cit . 29 and Pl. VII, no. 97 and 34 and Pl. VII, no. 10812

     Cf. M Picirillo, The Mosaics of Jordan, (American Center of Oriental Research Publications No. 1), Amman, 1992,337 and 347. Many thanks to Andrew Oddy for this reference.

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     Fig. 9 Fig. 10

    Second, objects raised on steps are usually objects of worship. This phenomenon is known from the

    whole ancient world and as an example it is only necessary to cite the Greek/Roman temples which

    are built on steps. Even ‘Abd al-Malik’s dome of the rock has the traditional steps in front of the

    entrance. And today the altar in Christian churches is raised on steps.

    Third, if ‘Abd al-Malik, during his first monetary reform, used a symbol on steps, it must have been

    a symbol of worship. This copies the Christian cross on steps – not transforms it. Therefore it was

    the first attempt to create a symbol for Islam.

    Hence I am starting from the idea that the symbol on steps is a religious one. Keeping in mind the

    three premises, we have to think about the religious meaning of the symbol. To anticipate my

    answer, I think it possible that it is an astral symbol, reflecting the tradition of worship of heavenly

     bodies in the Near East and in the Arabian peninsula.

    I will now present some numismatic and archaeological facts to support this idea.

    13

    We know that Muhammad, after having conquered Mecca in 630, destroyed all the statues of the

     pagan gods and created a monotheistic “Umma”, that means a community worshipping Allah, the

    single god. Before this event, the most important God in the Arabian peninsula was the old Syrian

    moon god Hubal (or Sin).14 The sun was his wife and the stars their children.15  In addition there

    were many other cults of heavenly bodies in pre-Islamic Arabia.

    Consider, for instance, the coins of the kingdom of Hadramaut in South-Arabia. These coins were

    struck during the 1st  to the 3rd  centuries AD. In 1937,16  and later in an article of 1952,17 Walker 

     

    13In this connection I will not deal with the bitter theological disputes which are currently held. Some are fighting for 

    the idea that Islam is, in truth, a Christian religion - cf. K-H Ohlig and G-R Puin, eds., Die dunklen Anfänge, NeueForschungen zur Entstehung und frühen Geschichte des Islam, 2

    nd edition, Berlin, 2006. Others are claiming that

    Islam is merely the continuation of the old pagan moon cult. They call it sometimes “moon-o-theism” - cf. R Morey,The Islamic Invasion, Montreal, 1992; Y Nathan, Moon-o-thesism, 2 vols, Lulu-Press (books on demand), 2006. For an extensive reply to both authors from M S M Saifullah, M E N Juferi and ‘Abdullah David see http://www.islamic-awareness.org/Quran/Sources/Allah/moongod.html.14 R Aslan, Kein Gott außer Gott , München and Zürich, 2008, 23, 28, 127; P Hitti, History of the Arabs, revised 10th

    edition, New York, 2002, 10015

     D Nielsen, Handbuch der arabischen Altertumskunde, Copenhagen, 1927, 193; H I Çinar, Die Religionen der  Araber  vor und in der frühislamischen Zeit , Wiesbaden, 2007, 15216 J Walker, ‘A new Type of South Arabian Coinage’, The Numismatic Chronicle 17 (5th series) (1937) 260-279, plate3317

     J Walker, ‘The Moon-God on Coins of the Hadramaut’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies,(University of London) 14 (3) (1952) 623-626

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    identified the letters on these coins as reading SIN, the moon god, and interpreted the eagle on the

    reverse to be a symbol of an eagle cult with lunar associations (Fig. 11).

     Fig. 11 Fig. 12

    The radiate head on the obverse of another coin (Fig. 12) was interpreted by Sedov as a Hadrami

    solar or lunar deity derived from the representation of Helios in Hellenistic and Roman coinage. 18

    The symbol on the reverse, however, has nothing to do with our symbol on steps; it seems to be a

    caduceus.

    Other Hadramaut coins19  repeat the SIN letters and show a bull, sometimes with a crescent moon

     between his horns. Later we will see that in ancient Syria (and not only there) the bull was regarded

    as the weather god (Hadad or Baal) symbolizing the sun and the moon.

      Fig. 13 Fig. 14

    Similar symbols to those on the coins of Hadramaut (for example the bull’s head – or Antilope’s

    head? - and the half moon) are to be found on the Himyarite and Sabean coins. The bull’s head in

    combination with the moon disk may have been adapted from the Egyptian pantheon.

    Summarizing, we can state that the coins of pre-Islamic Arabia show a lot of symbolism devoted to

    the pantheon of astral Gods.

    The archaeological evidence of the sun and moon cults in Mesopotamia and Syria is overwhelming

    through the millennia. We find corresponding depictions on stelae, figures, figurines, cylinder seals,

    metalwork, mosaics, and pictures. One of the earliest examples is the famous Sumerian stela of Ur-

     Nammu (Lower Mesopotamia) dating from around 2200 B.C. and showing symbols of the main

    deities: the crescent moon for Nanna, the moon god, later called Sin, and the sun symbol for his son

    Utu.

     

    18 A V Sedov,  МОНЕТБІ   ДРЕВНЕГО  ХАДРАМ  AУТА, (English summary: Coinage of Ancient Hadramawt ),

    Russian Centre of Strategic and International Research, Moscow, 1998, chapter II, 1. Cf. too: W Zich, ’Dievorislamische Münzprägung Südarabiens: Eine kritische Analyse des Forschungsstandes’, Mitteilungsblatt des Instituts

     für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte der Universität Wien 33 (06) 33-38 and P Schwinghammer, ’Sonnengott-

    Darstellungen in Hatra und Südarabien im Vergleich’, Mitteilungsblatt des Instituts für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte der Universität Wien 36 (08) 18-2119

     For the broadest material basis of the ancient Yemen coins cf. S Munro-Hay, Coinage of Arabia Felix, The Pre- Islamic Coinage of the Yemen , Milan, 2003

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    Another famous example is the neo-Babylonian stela of Nabonidus from Babylon dating from

    around 550 B.C. (Fig. 15). The Babylonian King Nabonidus is pictured possibly during a religious

    ceremony. Above him are the divine symbols of the moon god Sin (closest to him), the planet

    Venus of Ishtar, and the winged disk of the sun-god Shamash.

     Fig. 15. Stela of Nabonidus 20

    The stela illustrated in Fig. 16 was found at Tell Ahmar in Syria, 20 kilometres south of 

    Carchemish, and is dated to the 9th century B.C. In Assyrian times there was a centre of worship of 

    the weather god – here symbolised by a crescent moon on steps. The depiction has some

    resemblance to our symbol in question.

      Fig. 16. Fig. 17. Fig. 18.

    Stela of Tell Ahmar Stela of A şa ğ i Yarimca Stela of Atargatis

    The stela from Aşaği Yarimca, not far from Harran in the Jazirah, is comparable (Fig. 17). The late-

    Assyrian text twice mentions the moon god Sin. On the top of the pole the crescent moon is

    enclosing the disc of the full moon.

    The stela illustrated in Fig. 18 was made about a millennium later in Dura-Europos in southern

    Syria. It is from the Roman temple of Atargatis, which was built by Tiberius Gemellus, a son of 

    Drusus and Livia, during the first decades of the Christian era. Again we see the crescent moon

     

    20 Picture © The British Museum

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    combined with the symbol of the full moon. This symbolism has survived a millennium in Syria.

    The pole on the staff of our symbol on steps is reminiscent of the full moon on the stelae.

    The symbol on steps was used in Christian times too; on a mosaic from a church in Salamiye

    (Syria), dating from 440 A.D., two bulls are standing on either side of a fountain of life which is

    raised on steps.

    To summarise, in both Arabia and Syria there was a long tradition of astral cults21 and the depiction

    of astral symbols on steps also had a long tradition. The symbol on steps on the Standing Caliph

    coins echoes these traditions.

    Returning to numismatics, let us have a look at the coins in seventh century Syria from the time

     before the introduction of the Standing Caliph coins. In the series of Pseudo-Byzantine coins,

    usually garbled imitations of Byzantine prototypes of Heraclius and Constans II, we find astral

    symbols only sporadically. But there is one exception; within the so-called ΛITOIЄ  group, first

     published by Andrew Oddy22, which can be dated to the latest phase of the Pseudo-Byzantine

    coinage,23  we find the crescent moon and a star on the reverses for the first time, sometimes

    replacing the usual cross.

     Fig. 19

    During the following phase of minting of the Umayyad Imperial Image Coins astral symbols appear 

    in the same way on the coins of Hims.

       Fig. 20 Fig. 21

    In addition, 6- and 8-pointed stars are now to be found on obverses and reverses of the coins of 

    Damascus and also on the Standing Caliph coins of Aleppo, Baalbek, and Amman.

     

    21 For further reading see T Green, The City of the Moon God. Religious traditions of Harran, Leiden, New York and

    Köln, 1992, and J Tubach, Im Schatten des Sonnengottes. Der Sonnenkult in Edessa, Harran und Hatra am

    Vorabend der christlichen Mission, Wiesbaden, 198622 A Oddy, ‘The Christian Coinage of early Muslim Syria?’, ARAM  15 (2003) 185-19623

     H Pottier, I Schulze and W Schulze, ‘Pseudo-Byzantine coinage in Syria under Arab rule (636-c.670). Classificationand dating’, Revue Belge de Numismatique 154 (2008) 87-155, esp.132 f.

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       Fig. 22. “Pseudo-Damascus” mint Fig. 23. Amman

    Furthermore on coins of Tabariya24, the “al-waf ā lillāh” mint and even on post-reform copper coins

    we recognize a bull’s head, which can – as already mentioned – be seen as a symbol for the weather 

    god or the moon god.

     Fig. 24. Tabariya Fig. 25. “al-waf ā lill āh” mint 

     

     Figs. 26 and 27 25. Post-Reform coppers with bull‘s head and 

     half moon on a short pole respectively

    The same subjects appear on Arab countermarks in seventh century Syria. Both the 6-rayed star asan astral symbol and the bull’s head are recorded.26

       Fig. 28 Fig. 29 Fig. 30

    Summarising again, in the time before the introduction of the Standing Caliph coins we find

    increasing evidence for the use of astral symbols on the coinage in Syria.

    A short digression concerning the connection between the bull’s head and the moon worship is

    relevant at this point. There are some Syrian basalt stelae dating from the 9th/8th  century B.C.

    depicting an anthropomorphic horned bull with astral symbols:

     

    24 M Phillips, ‘Islamic legends on pre-reform coins of Tabariya’, XIII Congreso Internacional de Numismática,

     Madrid-2003, Actas I , Madrid, 2005, 1633 and 1638 no. 1625 Information and picture courtesy of Lutz Ilisch, Forschungsstelle fuer Islamische Numismatik of the University of Tuebingen, Inv. No. AD10B226

     T Goodwin, ‘Countermarks from after the Arab Conquest, Part II’ of: W Schulze and T Goodwin, Countermarking in seventh Century Syria, Supplement to ONS Newsletter 183 (2005) 42

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      Fig. 31. Betsaida Fig. 32. Tell el-A ś’ari Fig. 33. Standing Caliph coin

    The stela of Betsaida was found one kilometre east of the Jordan, not far from the Sea of Galilee.

    The stela of Tell el-Aś’ari is from Tafas, 20 kilometres south of Damascus. Both stelae show astylised horned bull with a sword. The rosettes between the horns in the form of a crescent moon

    and over the sword were interpreted as astral symbols, and the whole figures are said to be cult

    objects for worship the moon god Sin.27  It seems that both stelae had survived a long time,

    eventually being destroyed or put to secondary use in Roman times. The way of representation and

    the similarities to the reverses of the Standing Caliph coins are astonishing, but at present it would

     be speculative to draw too many inferences from this.

    We can, however, state that there are a lot of astral symbols on the coins minted during the second

    half of the 7th century in Syria. In addition to that we should not forget that at the same time the

    representation of the Standing Caliph, as well as the symbol on steps, are appearing on consumer 

    goods. Julian Raby has published both images on contemporary Umayyad glass jugs from Spainand Palestine.28  Raby notes: “The glass vessels belong to a moment when the Umayyads were

    defining a new language of imagery for Islam … ‘Abd al-Malik’s visual propaganda combined

    figurative and symbolic imagery”29.

    As we have seen this imagery echoes the old astral cults in both pre-Islamic Arabia and Syria.

    Taking into account this diverse imagery we have to ask what the Muslim population in 7 th century

    Syria believed? What was their idea or image of Muhammad’s single god? Did they still associate it

    with the old god Hubal or Sin? We have no answer to these questions. There are no contemporary

    sources; the first written sources are about 200 years later and don’t help.30

    “Islam in 7th  century Syria was the property of the conquering aristocracy”31, writes Gerald

    Hawting, and Daniel Brown states that “The Arabs were living in a bubble, isolated from the

    cultural and religious forces of the conquered lands”32. There were no attempts of “Islamisation” or 

    “Arabisation” of the local population. As far as we know the Koran was codified for the first time in

     

    27 M Bernett and O Kehl, Mond, Stier und Kult am Stadttor. Die Stele von Betsaida (et-Tell), Göttingen, 1998; for myths and cults around the bull cf. S Athanassopoulou and Y Tzedakis, eds., The Bull in the Mediterranean World ,(exhibition catalogue), Athens, 200328

     J Raby, ‘In Vitro Veritas’, in J Johns, ed., Bayt Al-Maqdis. Jerusalem and Early Islam (Oxford Studies in IslamicArt IX, Part two) Oxford, 1999, 113-18329 Raby, op. cit . p. 18130 The Koran declares Allah as creator of sun, moon and stars – sura 7, 54. For the Islamic idea of God cf. A T Khoury,

     Der Islam und die westliche Welt , Darmstadt, 2001, 49-7131

     G R Hawting, The first dynasty of Islam, 2nd

     edition, London and New York, 2000, 432

     D Brown, A New Introduction to Islam, Malden and Oxford, 2004, 38

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    the middle of the 7th century. But the first manuscripts date from the 9th century. We can start from

    the idea that Islam in 7th  century Syria was not yet a fully developed religion but remained still

    Muhammad’s imagination of a monotheistic “Umma”, a Muslim community.33

    One of the revolutionary ideas of ‘Abd al-Malik was to form a theocracy – a state that claimed to

    effect god’s will. “At the heart of the theocratic state was a religious office, the caliphate … and

    ‘Abd al-Malik represented god on earth and exercised wide-ranging authority as a result”, explainsChase Robinson34. At first this step was not a religious but a political one.

    For the Umayyad monuments of the late 7th  and early 8th  century Oleg Grabar noted: “Together 

    with various administrative and other practices there appeared the first elements of a visual

    symbolic system which will serve to identify the Muslim world.”35

    To invent a symbol on coins for ‘Abd al-Maliks theocracy it might seem obvious to fall back 

    initially on the old astral symbols which were well-known to most people in Syria. Possibly in this

    way the new symbolism with familiar elements was easily accepted.

     

     Fig. 34. Yubna Fig. 35. Ludd 

    If we follow this idea that the new symbol was supposed to represent Islam for everyone, we can

    turn to the previously mentioned numismatic problem that in Palestine, on a coin attributed to

    Amman and on the twin Caliph coin of Baisan or Jerash, the traditional cursive m and the capital Mrespectively remained on the reverses of the Standing Caliph coins and were not replaced by the

    new symbol.36

    The traditional places of astral cults like Haran, Nayrab, Hazor, and Beth Yerah were all situated

    north of Palestine, whereas the centres of Christian worship were in Palestine itself. The mints of 

    the Standing Caliph coins show the same “distribution” as far as the reverses are concerned; the

    coins with the symbol on steps are exclusively from mints situated north of Palestine, while all the

    reverses with m or M are from Palestine. It is clear that the distribution of the “symbol” reverses

    and the “m” reverses is identical with the centres of “pagan” and Christian worship. Possibly the

    first, and short-lived, monetary reform of ‘Abd al-Malik took into account the Christian

     predominance in Palestine and wanted to avoid coins with the new Islamic symbol not being

    accepted there.

    To complete the picture I have to raise a further issue; can we know more about the symbol on steps

    from the so-called Arab-Sasanian coins minted in the eastern Umayyad provinces? Here too we

    sometimes find the Standing Caliph and symbols on steps.

     

    33 Aslan, op. cit. (fn.14), 121 f., 132

    34 C F Robinson, ‘Abd al-Malik , Oxford, 2005, 10535 O Grabar, ‘Islamic Art and Byzantium’, Dumbarton Oaks Papers 18, Washington DC, 1964, 7936 Tony Goodwin considers the possibility that the Standing Caliph coins of the jund Filastin preceded the other 

    Standing Caliph issues by a few years, cf. Goodwin, op. cit . (fn. 10) 98 and Arab-Byzantine Coinage, Studies in the Khalili Collection, Vol. IV, London, 2005, 27 and 92

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     Figs. 36 and 37. Arab-Sasanian copper coins from Susa

    Apart from the fact that these coins are excessively rare, they are very diverse in their iconography.

    Rika Gyselen has shown the different depictions of the symbol on steps on the Arab-Sasanian

    Standing Caliph copper coins as yet only known from Susa.37 We can see that there is no centralised

    or uniform minting as in Syria and - following Gyselen - it seems unlikely that the Iranian mints

    used the Syrian copper type as their prototypes.38 Against this, Luke Treadwell has argued that the

    design of the Syrian Standing Caliph coins could well have influenced the Iranian issues.39

    Recently Nikolaus Schindel has discussed a small symbol which is added in front of the bust on an

    Arab-Sasanian silver drachm (Khusro II/posthumous type) minted in Damascus 74 AH/693 AD. He

    thinks that it is the same symbol (but without steps) which appears on the contemporary Standing

    Caliph coppers. Furthermore he mentions a lead bulla showing the upper part of the symbol,flanked by two palm branches, which will be published in the near future. Schindel concludes that

    the symbol links the 74 AH drachms with the Standing Caliph coins and is to be regarded as an

    “Umayyad symbol in its clearest form”.40

    Summary:

    During the reforms of ‘Abd al-Malik, Christian symbols were removed from public life. As part of 

    the reforms, the Standing Caliph coins were introduced. The symbol on steps on their reverses was

    not a “modified cross on steps”, and not an adaptation of Byzantine prototypes, but a first attempt to

    create a religious symbol for Islam at a time when the Arab government in Syria was developed into

    a theocracy. The introduction of the new Islamic symbol was not imposed in Christian Palestine.

    From archaeological and numismatic evidence we can compare the new symbol with elements from

     pre-Islamic astral cults in Arabia and the astral cults in Syria, which had a long tradition. Even

    today the half moon is the most prominent symbol for Islam, appearing on a lot of many national

    flags and decorating the top of every mosque.

    This all is a new approach to an old problem, an initiative for new thinking. It is not proven but is

    currently a hypothesis. Further research is necessary. As we have seen, the Standing Caliph and the

    symbol on steps do not appear exclusively on coins but also on objects of daily life. More

    archaeological evidence is necessary to obtain a greater degree of certainty.

     

    37 R Gyselen, Arab-Sasanian Copper Coinage, Vienna, 2000, types 39 and 4038 Gyselen, op. cit.  3839 L Treadwell, ‘The copper coinage of Umayyad Iran’, The Numismatic Chronicle 168 (2008) 16840

     N Schindel, Sylloge Nummorum Sasanidarum Israel , Wien, 2009, 18, 28-32 and Pl. 17 no. 225; J Walker,  ACatalogue of the Arab-Sassanian Coins, London, 1941, 23, Pl. XXXI, 4.