A beautiful bilingual Christian-Islamic Maravedi of Alfonso VIII el Noble
Lot 748
SPAIN, Castile & León. Alfonso VIII el Noble (the Noble), king of Castile, 1158-1214. Maravedi (Gold, 26 mm, 3.85 g, 2 h), Ṭulayṭula (Toledo) mint, Era Ṣafar 1228 = AD 1190 = AH 586/7. Central field, in four lines within a circle: •✠• / imām al-bīʿa / al-masīḥiyya bābah / ALF (‘The Imām of the Christian Church, The Pope; Alfonso’ in Arabic, with Latin ALF for Alfonso). Margin: bi-sm al-ab wa-l-ibn wa-l-rūḥ al-qudus al-ilāh al-wāḥid man āmana wa-taʿammada yakūn sāliman (‘In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, the one God; whoever believes and is baptized will be saved’ in Arabic). Rev. Central field, in five lines within a circle: •amīr• / al-qatūliqīn / Alfuns bin Sanja / ayyadahu Allāh / wa-naṣarahu (‘The prince of the Catholics, Alfonso son of Sancho; may God support him and grant him victory’ in Arabic). Below: •✶•. Margin: ḍuriba hādhā dīnār bi-madīnat Ṭulayṭula sanat thamān wa-ʿishrīn wa-miʾatayn wa-alf al-Ṣafar (‘This dinar was struck in the city of Toledo in the year 1228 [of the] Ṣafar era’ in Arabic). Cayón 1023. Friedberg 101. MEC 6, 360-2. Well-centered with clear legends, a rare and desirable specimen of this distinctive bilingual Christian-Islamic gold issue. Minor areas of weakness, otherwise, about extremely fine.


The gold Maravedis or Morabetinos of Alfonso VIII represent one of the most remarkable monetary developments of medieval Europe, combining Islamic epigraphic form with explicitly Christian religious content. Struck in Toledo from the late 12th century onward, these coins closely imitate the layout, calligraphy, and fabric of contemporary Almoravid and Almohad dinars, ensuring their acceptance in regions long accustomed to Islamic gold currency and reflecting the deep integration of Islamic monetary traditions within the Iberian economy.

A distinctive feature of this series is the prominent cross placed in the obverse field, a clear visual assertion of Christian authority within an otherwise fully Arabic epigraphic design. The inscriptions are particularly noteworthy for their deliberate adaptation of Islamic titulature into a Christian framework. The ruler is styled amīr al-qatūliqīn (‘Prince of the Catholics’), a direct counterpart to the Islamic amīr al-muʾminīn, while the Pope is described as imām al-bīʿa al-masīḥiyya, effectively presenting him as the religious head of the Christian community in terms familiar from Islamic political theology. From around Era Ṣafar 1222 onward, the addition of the Latin letters ALF beneath the cross further reinforces the identity of Alfonso, creating a striking bilingual and cross-cultural presentation.

These coins thus functioned not only as currency but also as instruments of political messaging, asserting Christian rule while preserving the visual and economic credibility of established Islamic coinage. Well-preserved examples such as the present piece are especially desirable.
Estimate:
1000 CHF
Starting price:
800 CHF
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Closing time: 30-May-26, 06:00:00 CEST
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