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Tashkent
KingTudun Coin
石國
土屯王鑄幣
Item number: A3628
Year: circa AD 600-700
Material: Copper
Size: 12.7 x 11.9 x 0.6 mm
Weight: 0.8 g
Manufactured by: Tashkent
Provenance: Stephen Album Rare Coins 2025
This coin was most likely issued by King Tudun of the Shih Kingdom (Chach) in the Transoxiana region, although its denomination remains uncertain.
The obverse depicts a two-thirds right-facing bust, representing either King Tudun himself or an unidentified deity, wearing a soft cap. The workmanship is crude and the image indistinct. The reverse bears a tamgha (Old Turkic: 𐱃𐰢𐰍𐰀, tamga), that is, a royal emblem—or possibly the civic or tribal emblem of the period—shaped like the upper portion of a trident, with a triangular base at the junction of the three prongs. Around the emblem appears the Sogdian legend “𐽂𐼹𐼴𐼻 𐼶𐼴𐼱 𐼿𐼰𐼿𐼷𐼻𐼸” (tδwn xwβ cʾcynk), which may be interpreted as “Tudun, Lord of Chach.” This name may correspond to “Kantu Tudun · She-she-ti · Yuqu Zhaomu,” as recorded in Chinese sources. The first component, “Kantu Tudun,” may reflect the pronunciation of Tudun; “She-she-ti” could represent a tribal name, possibly referring to the Čapšatā ton čor, one of the Duolu tribes of the Western Turkic Khaganate; and “Yuqu Zhaomu” (Ukkurt-camūk) may be related to Ukkurt-camūk, the ruler of Samarkand who dispatched envoys to the Tang court between AD 627 and 631.
The Shih Kingdom, corresponding to present-day Tashkent—the capital of Uzbekistan—derives its name from linguistic fusion: tash in Turkic means “stone,” and kent in Persian denotes “city.” In Tang sources, it was also known as “Zheshi” or “Zhezhi,” both transcriptions of Chach; alternative forms include “Tizhach” and “Zhezhe.” As one of the “Nine Surnames of Zhaowu,” the polity was located in the region of modern Tashkent, near the mouth of the Fergana Valley. This area served as a key corridor between Transoxiana and Semirechye, forming one of the principal hubs along the northern route of the Silk Road.
Chinese historical sources first mention the Shih Kingdom in the Book of Wei (Wei shu), where it is referred to as the “Stone City” or “Stone Settlement,” indicating that Chinese chroniclers were already aware of Turkic and Persian cultures and thus adopted a semantic translation. The History of the Northern Dynasties (Bei shi) records that the region was rich in mulberries, rice, grapes, and horses, and that its commerce was prosperous. The New History of the Tang (Xin Tang shu), in its section on the Western Regions, further notes that the Shih Kingdom was a Sogdian offshoot, abundant in resources, flourishing in urban life, and maintaining tributary relations with the Tang court over a long period.
The Buddhist monk Xuanzang (AD 602–664), during his westward pilgrimage to India, passed through this region and referred to it as the “Stone Kingdom” in his Records of the Western Regions of the Great Tang (Da Tang Xiyu ji). In the second year of the Xianqing era (AD 657), following the Tang campaign that subdued the Western Turkic Khaganate, the Tang Empire incorporated the “Nine Surnames of Zhaowu,” including the Shih Kingdom, under the jurisdiction of the Anxi Protectorate. In the following year (AD 658), the Tang established the Great Yuan Commandery at the city of Kanjie (modern Chirchik, Uzbekistan), appointing King Kantu Tudun as its governor (dudu), thereby making it one of the Tang Empire’s key bases of governance in Central Asia. Thereafter, diplomatic and commercial exchanges between the Shih Kingdom and the Tang court became increasingly frequent.
In AD 712, Muslim forces advanced into the Fergana Valley, and the neighbouring Shih Kingdom could hardly have escaped involvement. The ruler of Fergana was expelled by Qutayba ibn Muslim, governor of Khurasan under the Umayyad Caliphate, and replaced by another monarch. The deposed king fled to Kucha (Gaochang) to seek refuge and requested military aid from the Tang court. In the third year of the Kaiyuan era (AD 715), Zhang Xiaosong, Protector-General of Beiting, defeated the Tibetan garrison and restored the Fergana kingdom. Later, the rise of the Turgesh Khaganate led to prolonged conflict with the Arabs. In the ninth year of the Tianbao era (AD 750), Gao Xianzhi feigned peace with the Shih Kingdom and then launched a surprise attack, capturing the king of Shih, the Turgesh khagan surnamed Huang, a Tibetan chieftain, and the ruler of Jieshi. The king of Shih was taken to Chang’an and executed, provoking resentment among the “Nine Surnames of Zhaowu.” The prince of Shih subsequently allied with the “Black-robed Arabs,” that is, the Abbasid Caliphate, and brought their forces into Transoxiana.
In the tenth year of Tianbao (AD 751), Gao Xianzhi, learning of this alliance, struck pre-emptively but was defeated at the Battle of Talas. By the fourteenth year of Tianbao (AD 755), the An Lushan Rebellion had erupted; the Silk Road was severed, frontier defences collapsed, and the Tang Empire permanently lost its influence over the Western Regions. The power of the Karluk Khaganate subsequently rose, and the Shih Kingdom, through frequent contact with the Abbasid Caliphate, gradually came under its political and cultural sphere.
Although considered one of the Sogdian polities of the “Nine Surnames of Zhaowu,” pre-Islamic Tashkent exhibited a dual cultural structure: Turkic language and culture dominated the ruling elite, while Sogdian culture prevailed among the lower classes engaged in agriculture, trade, and craftsmanship. With the decline of Tang authority and the eastward expansion of Islam, the Shih Kingdom was ultimately absorbed into the Islamic world. By the Ming and Qing periods, Chinese sources referred to it as “Dashigan,” a transliteration of “Tashkent.”
物件編號: A3628
年代: 約公元 600-700 年
材質: 銅
尺寸: 12.7 x 11.9 x 0.6 mm
重量: 0.8 g
製造地: 塔什干
來源: 史蒂芬稀有錢幣專輯 2025
這是一枚應為河中地區石國的土屯(Tudun)王所鑄的錢幣,幣值不明。
錢幣正面應為土屯王或不知名神祇的三分之二右側肖像,頭帶軟帽。製作不精,幣圖漫漶。錢幣背面則為塔木加(古突厥語:𐱃𐰢𐰍𐰀, tamga),即王徽,或當時的城徽、族徽。形式為三叉戟的戟首部分,戟叉根部基座為三角形。徽記周圍應有粟特文「𐽂𐼹𐼴𐼻 𐼶𐼴𐼱 𐼿𐼰𐼿𐼷𐼻𐼸」(tδwn xwβ c’cynk),可能意為「赭時君主土屯」。可能可以對應漢籍中的瞰土屯·攝舍提·於屈昭穆,瞰土屯可能對應土屯(Tudun)的發音;攝舍提可能為部族名,西突厥五咄陸(Duolu)之一便是攝舍提暾啜(Čapšatā ton čor);於屈昭穆(Ukkurt-camūk)一名則可能與公元627至631年間遣使入唐的撒馬爾罕王屋屈支木有關。
Шагалов, В. Д., и А. В. Кузнецов. Каталог монет Чача III–VIII вв. Ташкент: Фан, 1988.
Zeimal’, E. V. The circulation of coins in Central Asia during the Early Medieval Period (fifth–eighth centuries AD). Bulletin of the Asia Institute, 8, 1994, pp.245-267.
Камышев, Александр M. Раннесредневековый монетный комплекс Семиречья: история возникновения денежных отношений на территории Кыргызстана. Бишкек, 2002.
Lurje, Pavel B. Dictionary: Personal Names in Sogdian Texts: Aleph 65-134. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press (ÖAW), 2013.