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Bukhara
King Ramchitak
Cash Coin
安國
羅姆奇塔克王鑄幣
Item number: A3514
Reference number: Smirnova#1408
Year: ca. AD 650-660
Material: Bronze
Size: 17.0 x 17.6 x 1.2 mm
Weight: 1.6 g
Manufactured by: Bukhara Mint
Provenance: Stephen Album Rare Coins 2025
This specimen is a round coin with a square central hole, believed to have been cast under King Ramchitak of An State in Transoxiana.
Its form follows the traditional model of round coins with square holes used in the Chinese cultural sphere. The obverse bears Sogdian characters, approximately reading “𐽀𐼰𐼺𐼿𐼷𐽂𐼸 𐼱𐼷𐼲” (r’mcytk ßy γ), which may be translated as “King Ramchitak.” The outer rim displays multiple areas that appear to have been cut or clipped, and both the outer rim and inner rim exhibit rough filing.
On the coin’s field, above the square hole, there is a faint “℧”-shaped symbol, adjoining the inner rim. Below the square hole, though indistinct, similar specimens indicate the presence of another symbol, “Ω.” Together, the “℧” above, the square hole “□,” and the “Ω” below form a vertical alignment that constitutes the tamga (Old Turkic: 𐱃𐰢𐰍𐰀, tribal emblem in the Turkic tradition), likely functioning as the civic emblem of Bukhara.
An State was one of the Sogdian city-states, located in the western region of Transoxiana (modern southwestern Uzbekistan). In Tang sources it was considered one of the “Nine Surnames of Zhaowu” or “Nine Hu Surnames.” Its people often adopted their state name as a surname when residing in Chinese territory; the most famous example is An Lushan. Despite the name “Nine Surnames,” the confederation did not necessarily consist of exactly nine polities, nor was it ethnically homogeneous. The origins of the Sogdians may be traced back to remnants of the Greater Yuezhi, who, after their defeat by the Xiongnu, gradually assimilated with Turkic and other local peoples.
In AD 630, during the fourth year of Emperor Taizong’s Zhenguan reign, Tang generals Li Jing and Li Ji destroyed the Eastern Turkic Khaganate, increasing Tang influence in Central Asia. In AD 638, during Zhenguan 12, An State presented its first tribute to the Tang court. In AD 659, during Emperor Gaozong’s Xianqing 4, the Tang conquered the Western Turkic Khaganate, bringing the Zhaowu polities under nominal control and appointing the ruler of An as Prefect of Anxi Province, subordinated to the Anxi Protectorate. Leveraging their geographical position and commercial networks, the Sogdians actively engaged in Silk Road trade, establishing communities in Chang’an, Luoyang, and other centres, and gradually attaining influence within the Tang Empire’s military and administrative systems.
In AD 709, during Emperor Zhongzong’s Jinglong 3, the governor of Khurasan and general of the Umayyad Caliphate (then referred to in Chinese as the “White-robed Arabs”), Qutayba ibn Muslim, captured the An capital of Bukhara (then transliterated as Buhe), bringing about the state’s downfall.
Камышев, Александр M. Раннесредневековый монетный комплекс Семиречья: история возникновения денежных отношений на территории Кыргызстана. Бишкек, 2002.