The Telavi Hoard of Clipped Umayyad Dirhams

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32859/10.32859/neg/17/149-167

Keywords:

monetary circulation, hoard, clipped dirham, Arab dominance in Georgia

Abstract

This study examines a hoard of clipped Umayyad dirhams discovered in 2022 in the environs of Telavi, a city in eastern Georgia. The hoard comprised only Umayyad dirhams, reportedly numbering between 20 and 25, including: Dimashq – 2 (11.8%); Wāsiṭ – 11 (64.7%); Al-Kūfah – 1 (5.9%); Al-Baṣrah – 2 (11.8%); Fīl (a rare mint of unknown location) – 1 (5.9%). The coins span the years AH 89–120, and the terminus ante quem non for the hoard, determined by its latest coin, is AH 120 (737/8). It was presumably deposited in the late 730s or 740s.

Before deposition, all of the dirhams had been clipped in a way that preserved their circular form but affected their weight. The average weight is 1.58 g (range: 1.49–1.69 g), calculated from seven clipped but unfragmented, weighed specimens.

The historical significance of this hoard derives from its unique composition and findspot:

  1. It represents the earliest hoard datable to the period of Arab dominance in Georgia;
  2. It contains only Umayyad dirhams, without any admixture of Sasanian drachms that had circulated locally before the Arab conquest; and
  3. It consists solely of dirhams that were clipped to an as-yet-unclarified standard.

The Umayyad silver may have entered the monetary system of areas remote from Tiflīs as early as the 740s.

Author Biography

  • Irakli Paghava, G. Tsereteli Institute of Oriental Studies, Ilia State University

    Associate Researcher at G. Tsereteli Institute of Oriental Studies, Ilia State University

     

Published

14.11.2025

Issue

Section

History, Primary Sources Studies, Numismatics

How to Cite

The Telavi Hoard of Clipped Umayyad Dirhams . (2025). The Near East and Georgia, 17, 149-167. https://doi.org/10.32859/10.32859/neg/17/149-167

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