Digital museum showcasing the collection of worldwide legends over the years! 千古不朽博物館展示多年來收藏的世界傳奇故事!
Karluks Khanate
Arslan
Double TamgaCash Coin
葛邏祿汗國
阿爾斯蘭
雙徽記幣
Item number: A3645
Year: circa AD 750-800
Material: Bronze
Size: 19.6 x 18.8 x 1.3 mm
Weight: 2.55 g
Manufactured by: Panjakent Mint
Provenance: Stephen Album Rare Coins 2025
This coin was first issued in the Jeti-Su region under the Qarluq Khaganate and is also known as the Arslanī coin, after the royal title Arslan Khagan.
The coin follows the traditional form of the Chinese cultural sphere, being round with a square central hole. The obverse bears a Sogdian inscription reading “𐼱𐼲𐼷 𐼶𐽀𐼰𐽄𐼴𐼷 𐼲𐼰𐼲𐼰𐼻 𐼾𐼻𐼷” (βγy xr’lwy γ’γ’n pny). The word “𐼱𐼲𐼷” (βγy) means “heaven” or “divine”; “𐼶𐽀𐼰𐽄𐼴𐼷” (xr’lwy) represents “Qarluq,” the tribal name; “𐼲𐼰𐼲𐼰𐼻” (γ’γ’n) signifies “khagan” or “ruler”; and “𐼾𐼻𐼷” (pny) denotes “coin.” The entire inscription may therefore be interpreted as “coin of the divine Qarluq khagan” or “Qarluq heavenly khagan coin.” The structure of the legend is identical to that found on earlier Türgesh issues.
On the reverse, to the right of the central perforation appears what is believed to be the Old Turkic letter “𐰯” in an Orkhon variant, resembling the letter “M” with a downward extension at its centre. In the lower right field is the tamga (tribal emblem) of the Qarluq, shaped like “∋.” The upper and left fields contain Sogdian inscriptions, the meanings of which remain uncertain.
At the beginning of the 7th century, the Karluks were a subordinate tribe within the Eastern Turkic Khaganate, inhabiting the upper Yenisei basin and the steppe east of Lake Balkhash. When the Second Turkic Khaganate was re-established in AD 682, the Karluks again became its vassals, but by the mid-8th century they had risen to independence amid internal struggles within the Khaganate and the westward expansion of the Abbasid Caliphate. In AD 739, the Tang dynasty accepted the Karluks as tributary allies in an effort to counterbalance Turkic power. In AD 744, the Karluks allied with the Uighurs and the Basmils to overthrow the Second Turkic Khaganate. In AD 766, they defeated the remnants of the Turgesh Khaganate in the Seven Rivers region, thereby establishing their supremacy there. Subsequently, they controlled key urban centres such as Suyab and Talas, acting as intermediaries along the major trans-Asian trade routes. The Karluk polity was loosely organised, blending Turkic and Iranian cultural elements, and by the late 8th century they had embraced Islam. Their descendants later founded the Kara-Khanid Khanate in the 9th century, partly inheriting and perpetuating the Turkic political and cultural traditions of Central Asia.
Камышев, Александр M. Раннесредневековый монетный комплекс Семиречья: история возникновения денежных отношений на территории Кыргызстана. Бишкек, 2002.