Long ago, even before the advent of Islam, earlier
civilizations used the gold and silver coins by weight as money. These
bimetallic coins facilitated trades and exchange of commodities among
communities, regions, tribes and even continents as gold and silver were
universally accepted medium of exchange. The advent of Islam also supports the
usage of these coins as money. The standardized Islamic version is called Dinar and Dirham. The initial Dinar coins used by the Muslims were minted by
the Byzantine Romans (which were called the Solidus) and initial Dirham coins
were minted by the Sasanians (which were called Drachm).
Solidus (Heraclius
610 AD)
Drachm (Khusro II 610
AD)
Even after establishing the first Islamic state in CE 622,
the Muslims did not institute a coinage of their own. This remained true for
Arabia through the end of the Orthodox Caliphate and the early part of the
Umayyad rule.
During the early years of their reign, the Umayyads
continued to use silver Sasanian coins in Iran and Iraq, and gold and copper
Byzantine coins in Syria and Egypt.
At first these Dirhams didn't differ much from the Sasanian
coins they copied, but by the third decade of Islam, marginal writings started
appearing on these Dirhams [Bism Allah] leading eventually to the replacement
of the pahlavi script and the Yesdigrid era dating with Arabic script and Hijri
Dating.
These Dirhams were replaced by purely epigraphic Dirhams in
the reform of 'Abd al-Malik Bin Marwan. Following is the translation of Ibn
al-Athir's account of the coinage reform and its reasons.
Islamic Dirham
As part of his policy to unify the various regions under
Islamic rule, Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan (685-705CE) introduced the first Umayyad
gold coins at a time of discord between the Umayyads and Byzantines over the
merits of Islam and Christianity. The early coins were struck either in 691 or
692; the Byzantine emperor was angry and refused to accept the new Arab gold
currency, renewing the war between the Arabs and the Byzantines.
The new Islamic currency that was first coin to carry an
Arabic inscription was called a dinar and was similar, in both size and weight,
to the Byzantine solidus. On the obverse, there were three standing figures of
unknown identities, as on the Byzantine coin, which had on its obverse the
figures of Heracles, Heraclias Constantine, and Heraclonas; on the reverse, the
Byzantine cross was replaced by a column placed on three steps topped with a
sphere. In the margin surrounding the design the testimony of Islam was written
in Arabic: "In the name of Allah, there is no deity but Allah; He is One;
Muhammad is the messenger of Allah."
Byzantine Solidus
Islamic Dinar
The new Arab-Byzantine coin stressed the unity of God to
counter the Christian Trinitarian doctrine, and made no mention of the caliph.
The Byzantine emperor Justinian II responded to this
challenge by striking a new solidus with the head of Christ on the obverse and
on the reverse an image of himself robed and holding a cross.
Caliph Abd al-Malik's response was to issue a new dinar in
693.
On its obverse was the upright figure of the caliph, wearing
an Arab headdress and holding a sword, with the testimony of Islam inscribed in
the margin. The reverse bore the same column on three steps and the sphere, but
a new legend appeared around the margin: "In the name of God this dinar
was struck in the year four and seventy" Only eight of these early
Arab-Byzantine dinars, dated according to the new Islamic calendar, have
survived. Once more, the Byzantine emperor Leontius responded by striking a new coin similar to that
of the Arabs, which greatly displeased Abd al-Malik.
In 697 the caliph decided to abandon all traces of
iconography and introduced the first Islamic coin devoid of figurative
representation.
Gold Dinar
On both sides of the new dinar were inscribed verses from
the Qur'an, expressing the message of Islam and making each piece an individual
missionary of the faith. After he introduced this coin, Abd al-Malik issued a
decree making it the only currency to be used throughout Umayyad lands. All
remaining Byzantine and Arab-Byzantine pieces were to be handed to the
treasury, to be melted down and re-struck. Those who did not comply faced the
death penalty. The new gold dinars weighed a bit less than the solidus and the
state controlled the accuracy of its weight along with the purity of the
gold.
Silver Dirham
The Gold Dinars and Silver Dirhams with Qur’anic verses remain
legal tenders during various caliphates and kingdoms till 1920CE (Alim Khan of
Bukhara).
Recently many attempts have been made to revive this Islamic
currency of Dinars and Dirhams. The countries minting these coins are as
follows;
Indonesia
The currency
was introduced in Indonesia in the year 2000 by Islamic Mint Nusantara (IMN).
In 2011 IMN reveal the mithqal correction both weight and purity and follow by
minting the Dinar 4.44 gram or 1/7 troy ounce (9999) and Dirham 3.11 gram or
1/10 troy ounce (9999).
Malaysia
Kelantan was
the first state in the country to introduce the dinar in 2006, which was
locally minted. In 2010, it issued new coins, including the dirham, minted in United Arab Emirates by World Islamic
Mint.
The state of
Perak followed suit, minting its own dinar and dirham, which was launched in
2011.
Other countries are also minting Gold Dinars and Silver
Dirhams including UAE, USA, Australia
etc but are not used as legal tenders in the country.