Medieval Muslim Money: The Cornerstone of Commercial Empire : an Inquiry Into the Evolution of Islam's "monetary Policy" as Shaped by the Precious Metals Indigenous to the Dar Al-Islam |
Contents
The Underpinnings of Early | 6 |
The Monetary Reforms | 23 |
Umayyad Coins Struck in the Dār | 35 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. S. Ehrenkreutz Abbasid Caliph Abd al-Malik Abd Allah Abū al-Amin al-Andalus Al-Bakri al-Balādhurī al-Basrah al-Hajjāj Al-Hamdānī al-Ma'mun Al-Maqrīzī Al-Nuqūd al-Rashid Allah Arab Baghdad banu Sulaym Beirut Byzantine Cairo Caliph Abd al-Malik century circulation cited coinage commencing commercial concurrently contemporary copper currency issues currency production currency reforms Damascus Dar al-Islam dīnārs dirhams dirhams were struck dynasty's early medieval East Economic History Egypt Egyptian Endnotes epigraphy Europe Fatimid fulūs gold and silver gold dīnārs governor Hārūn hoards Ibn Hawqal Ibn Khaldun Ibn Rustah idem inscriptions Iraq Islamic Islamic coins Islamic currency Jiddah Khazars Kitāb Leiden likewise London Mahd al-Dhahab Makkah Marwan medieval Arab medieval Islamic medieval Muslim merchants mining mints monetary policy Muslim North Africa Numismatic operations Pahlevi script passim provinces Qur'anic region reign of Caliph Riyadh rulers Sāsānid silver dirhams sources standard struck coins Surviving Coin Specimens trade transactions Umar Umayyad Caliph weight Yusuf