{"product_id":"cstc-a30n","title":"HINDU SHAHIS. INO Samanta Deva. Silver Jital. Bull \u0026 Horseman. Ohind (Hund), (c. 850-1026). Tye-14.","description":"\u003cp\u003eThis silver jital was struck in the name of Samanta Deva at the Ohind (Hund) mint, attributed to the Hindu Shahi dynasty of Kabulistan and Gandhara, circa 850–1026 AD. The obverse bears a recumbent zebu bull to the left with the Nagari legend \"Sri Samanta Devah\" above — the honorific title that gives this series its name — accompanied by a star, pellet, and inverted crescent to the left. The reverse depicts a horseman advancing to the right holding a banner, with Nagari letters in the field. Catalogued as Tye-14, this is the most commonly encountered variety of the Hindu Shahi silver jital, though the attribution is given here with the caveat that individual examples can be difficult to assign with certainty to a specific Tye number or mint without direct comparison to reference specimens.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp\u003e\"Samanta Deva\" — meaning \"Honorable Feudatory Lord\" or \"Honorable Chief Commander\" — is a title rather than a personal name. The coins bearing this legend were not necessarily struck by a single ruler but represent an extended series produced by the Hindu Shahi dynasty and potentially by successor regimes that continued the established coinage conventions long after the dynasty's original political core had shifted. This is what numismatists call an INO series — struck \"In the Name Of\" Samanta Deva — acknowledging that the title and its associated coin design persisted across multiple rulers and political contexts.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp\u003eThe Hindu Shahis were a dynasty whose history is inseparable from the landscape of what is now Afghanistan. Originally centered at Kabul — the capital of the Kabulistan region — they represent one of the last great Hindu kingdoms of the Afghan plateau before the Islamic conquests of the late 10th and early 11th centuries transformed the religious and political character of the region permanently. Their coinage, the bull and horseman jital, was so deeply embedded in the commercial life of Gandhara and the surrounding territories that it continued to circulate and be imitated long after the dynasty itself had fallen. The eventual loss of Kabul and the territory west of the Indus to the Ghaznavid dynasty under Sabuktigin and his son Mahmud of Ghazni — who launched his celebrated series of raids into the Indian subcontinent from his Afghan base at Ghazna — pushed the surviving Hindu Shahi rulers east to Ohind on the Indus, the mint from which this coin is attributed. Ohind, located in the Gandhara region on the east bank of the Indus in what is now northwestern Pakistan, became the last capital of the dynasty before its final collapse in the early 11th century.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp\u003eStruck in silver to a standard weight of approximately 3.1–3.2 grams at roughly 18mm diameter, this jital is a survivor of one of the most historically resonant coinages of the medieval Afghan and Gandharan world — a small silver piece that circulated across the frontier between the Hindu and Islamic worlds at precisely the moment that frontier was being permanently redrawn.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Chicken Street Trading Co.","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45676604817465,"sku":"CSTC-A30N","price":49.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0787\/1568\/2873\/files\/B02E8C74-A366-41E5-863F-8E714C0992E0.jpg?v=1775518664","url":"https:\/\/chickenstreettrading.com\/products\/cstc-a30n","provider":"Chicken Street Trading Co.","version":"1.0","type":"link"}