Obverse: Two Male Busts in Profile Facing Each
Other; Inscription "Necmeddin, Melik
Diyarbekir"
Reverse: The Virgin Crowning a Byzantine
Emperor; Inscription "Ebu'l Muzaffer Alpi bin
Timurtas bin Ilgazi bin Artuk"
The Artuqid Dynasty was founded by Artuq, an
Oghuz Turk who originally served as a general in
the army of the Seljuk Sultan of Damascus. After
proving his worth on the battlefield, Artuq was
appointed governor of Jerusalem after it was
captured by the Seljuks in 1086. Five years
later, Artuq passed away and was succeeded by
his sons Sokman and Ilghazi who continued to
rule Jerusalem until 1098 when the Fatimids
gained control of the city. Sokman and Ilghazi
fled the Holy Land and established new bases of
power in the cities of Diyarbakir, Mardin, and and
Hasankeyf in Southeastern Turkey. Here, they
came into conflict with the Crusaders. At various
times, the Artuqids allied themselves with the
Great Seljuks while at other times they opposed
the Seljuks. Later on, they would join forces with
the great Ayyubid Sultan Saladin. Over time, the
Artukids broke apart into separate branches as
their influence began to wane under the
Ayyubid’s power and their ruled in name only.
After attempting to form an alliance with the
Sultanate of Rum, the Hasankeyf branch was
destroyed by the Ayyubids in 1231. The Mardin
branch lasted a while longer, but only as a vassal
of a string of neighboring powers including the
Ayyubids, the Sultanate of Rum, and the
Timurids until finally falling to the forces of
Karakoyunlu in 1409.
The Artuqids issued a series of autonomous
coinage modeled not on contemporary Arab
examples, but on earlier Greek, Roman, and
Byzantine issues which had not been in
circulation for several centuries at least. The
obverse of this coin is based on Roman coins that
featured two draped male busts. The reverse,
however, follows a Byzantine type issued by
Romanus III and Constantine X depicting the
emperor being crowned by the Virgin Mary. It is
thought that the iconography of this coin has an
astrological meaning, with the two busts on the
obverse representing the Gemini twins while the
reverse may depict allegorical representations of
Mercury as the emperor and Virgo as the Virgin.