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Tabaristan Khurshid (c.A.D. 740-761) Silver Hemidrachm / Altar NGC MS (010)MODIFIED ITEM : No CERTIFICATION NUMBER : 6157826 010 CERTIFICATION : NGC DENOMINATION : Hemidrachm KM NUMBER : 740 761 AD GRADE : MS YEAR : 740 761 AD Ancient Tabaristan Khurshid (c. A. D. 740 761) AR Hemidrachm GRADED NGC MS Obverse: Crowned Bust Reverse: Fire Altar, Attendants Khurshid ( 734761), erroneously designated Khurshid II by earlier scholars, was the last Dabuyid ispahbadh of Tabaristan. He succeeded to the throne at an early age, and was
- MODIFIED ITEM : No
- CERTIFICATION NUMBER : 6157826-010
- CERTIFICATION : NGC
- DENOMINATION : Hemidrachm
- KM NUMBER : 740-761 AD
- GRADE : MS
- YEAR : 740-761 AD
Ancient Tabaristan
Khurshid (c.A.D. 740-761) AR Hemidrachm
GRADED NGC MS
Obverse: Crowned Bust
Reverse: Fire Altar, Attendants
Khurshid ( 734–761), erroneously designated Khurshid II by earlier scholars, was the last Dabuyid ispahbadh of Tabaristan. He succeeded to the throne at an early age, and was supervised by his uncle as regent until he reached the age of fourteen. Khurshid tried to assert his independence from his vassalage to the Caliphate, supported various rebellions and maintained diplomatic contacts with Tang China. Finally, the Abbasids conquered his country in 759–760, and captured most members of his family. Khurshid fled to Daylam, where he ended his life.
Khurshid was born in 734/735, the son of Dadhburzmihr or Dadmihr (died 740) and grandson of Farrukhan the Great (died ca. 728), the first ruler (ispahbadh) of the Dabuyid dynasty from whose reign coins are known. According to the traditional account, the Dabuyids had established themselves as the autonomous rulers of Tabaristan in the 640s, during the tumults of the Muslim conquest of Persia and the collapse of the Sassanid Empire. They owed only the payment tribute and nominal vassalage to the Arab Caliphate, and managed, despite repeated Muslim attempts at invasion, to maintain their autonomy by exploiting the inaccessible terrain of their country. A more recent interpretation of the sources by P. Pourshariati, however, supports that Farrukhan was the one who actually established the family's rule over Tabaristan, sometime in the 670s. In earlier works on the dynasty, Khurshid is named Khurshid II, due to erroneous interpretation of numismatic evidence, which led earlier scholars to interpolate a first Khurshid before Farrukhan, whose rule was thought to have begun ca. 710.
Khurshid succeeded his father at the age of
only six, and for eight years the regency was exercised by his uncle Farrukhan-i
Kuchak ("Farrukhan the Little"). When Khurshid came of age, Farrukhan's own sons
refused to recognize his claim and tried to usurp the throne. Their plot was
allegedly betrayed to Khurshid by a slave girl, Varmja Haraviya. With the help
of the sons of his cousin Jushnas, Khurshid managed to defeat and imprison
Farrukhan's sons. He later took Varmja Haraviya as his wife, while the sons of
Jushnas were given high positions in the state. The historian Ibn Isfandiyar
gives a vivid description of the prosperity of Tabaristan at this time, which
was a major centre for textile production (including silk), and which traded
with the Turks of Central Asia, probably via the Caspian Sea. Khurshid is said
to have contributed to this prosperity by building numerous bazaars and
caravanserais. Khurshid also tried to consolidate and even extend his royal
power, and used the turmoil within the Umayyad Caliphate during the Third Fitna
to this effect, rebelling against Caliph Marwan II (r. 744–750), and even
sending an embassy to the Tang court in 746, which recognized him ("king
Hu-lu-ban") as a vassal prince.
During the Abbasid Revolution, however, he was forced to submit to the Abbasid
armies under Abu Muslim. As one of Abu Muslim's vassals, he supported the latter
in his quarrel with the Caliph al-Mansur (r. 754–775). After the Caliph had Abu
Muslim murdered in 755, Khurshid supported the anti-Abbasid rebellion of Sunbadh,
who entrusted part of Abu Muslim's treasure to Khurshid's keeping. When
Sunbadh's revolt was defeated, Sunbadh fled to Tabaristan, but was killed there
by one of Khurshid's cousins, ostensibly because he had failed to show the man
proper respect. It is possible, however, that the murder was instigated by
Khurshid, in the hope of acquiring the remainder of Abu Muslim's treasure.
Al-Mansur sent his son and heir, al-Mahdi (r. 775–785), to recover the treasure
of Abu Muslim. Khurshid denied having it, and al-Mansur tried to unseat Khurshid
by crowning one of his cousins as ispahbadh. This did not have the desired
effect of challenging the loyalty of Khurshid's subjects, but Khurshid was
eventually forced to accommodate the Abbasids by accepting an increase in the
annual tribute, which brought it to the level paid to the Sassanids.
Soon after, nevertheless, Khurshid took advantage of the rebellion of Abd al-Jabar
ibn Abd al-Rahman, the governor of Khurasan, to once again throw off allegiance
to the Caliphate. Al-Mansur sent an army into Tabaristan, with the intention of
completely subduing the country and making it a province. Khurshid fled to the
fortress of al-Tak in the mountains, where he was besieged in 759–760. Although
Khurshid himself escaped to nearby Daylam, the fortress eventually fell, and
with it his family fell into the hands of the Abbasids and brought to
Baghdad. From Daylam, Khurshid tried to regain his kingdom. He raised an
army from the mountain dwellers of the region, and invaded Tabaristan in 760.
Repulsed, he returned to Daylam. After learning of his family's capture,
he is said to have exclaimed "after this there is no inclination to life and
joy, and death is the very solace and respite itself", and took poison, probably
in 761.
Tabaristan became a regular province of the Caliphate, ruled from Amul by an
Arab governor, although the local dynasties of the Bavandids, Karinids and
Zarmihrids, formerly subject to the Dabuyids, continued to control the
mountainous interior as tributary vassals of the Abbasid government. Coins were
minted in Tabaristan in Khurshid's name until 764, whereafter the name of the
Abbasid governor was substituted. As a result, some earlier works also mention
767 as the date of Khurshid's death
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