أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)

This research is concerned in the role of the Jews during the reign of sultan Selim the first, as they played an important role in striking coins in the Egyptian mint during the Ottoman era with their direct supervision on it, getting the row metal to it, and their work as exchangers. These Jews wor...

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Main Author: أ..د.أحمد محمد یوسف
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: The General Union of Arab Archaeologists 2015-01-01
Series:Journal of General Union of Arab Archaeologists
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jguaa.journals.ekb.eg/article_3003_ae18ec27d995e2ce72a0ed0cc471a3ca.pdf
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spelling doaj-7114475747264162b84aa3e1221e26fa2020-11-24T22:20:46ZaraThe General Union of Arab ArchaeologistsJournal of General Union of Arab Archaeologists2536-98222536-98302015-01-01161612310.21608/JGUAA.2015.3003 أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)أ..د.أحمد محمد یوسف0عضو هیئة تدریس بقسم الآثار الاسلامیة جامعة القاهرةThis research is concerned in the role of the Jews during the reign of sultan Selim the first, as they played an important role in striking coins in the Egyptian mint during the Ottoman era with their direct supervision on it, getting the row metal to it, and their work as exchangers. These Jews working in the mint damaged the gold, silver and copper coins, who pushed Ibrahim the Jew –master of the mint- to take from the Muslim’s money. Also, not engraving the coronation date of sultan Selim, and only minting the date of struck on the Egyptian gold coins might be a proof that the Jews wanted to show that there is no legitimacy for the sultan in Egypt as he is considered as an invader on the Mamluks. Also, it was mentioned that the Jewish masters were keen to keep the Mamluk traditions on sultan Selim’s coins in the form of writing the inscriptions of the obverse and reverse in horizontal lines inside two circles, along with the decoration of waves from left to right. Besides, the research shows the role of Jews in engraving the David’s star on sultan Selim’s coins for the first time in the history of Ottoman coinage, which was obvious between the lines of the reverse inscriptions.http://jguaa.journals.ekb.eg/article_3003_ae18ec27d995e2ce72a0ed0cc471a3ca.pdfJewsthe Sultan Selim Icoinsthe Ottoman era
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author أ..د.أحمد محمد یوسف
spellingShingle أ..د.أحمد محمد یوسف
أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
Journal of General Union of Arab Archaeologists
Jews
the Sultan Selim I
coins
the Ottoman era
author_facet أ..د.أحمد محمد یوسف
author_sort أ..د.أحمد محمد یوسف
title أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
title_short أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
title_full أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
title_fullStr أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
title_full_unstemmed أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
title_sort أثر الیهود على نقود السلطان سلیم الأول فى مصر (923هـ/1517م – 926هـ/1520م)
publisher The General Union of Arab Archaeologists
series Journal of General Union of Arab Archaeologists
issn 2536-9822
2536-9830
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This research is concerned in the role of the Jews during the reign of sultan Selim the first, as they played an important role in striking coins in the Egyptian mint during the Ottoman era with their direct supervision on it, getting the row metal to it, and their work as exchangers. These Jews working in the mint damaged the gold, silver and copper coins, who pushed Ibrahim the Jew –master of the mint- to take from the Muslim’s money. Also, not engraving the coronation date of sultan Selim, and only minting the date of struck on the Egyptian gold coins might be a proof that the Jews wanted to show that there is no legitimacy for the sultan in Egypt as he is considered as an invader on the Mamluks. Also, it was mentioned that the Jewish masters were keen to keep the Mamluk traditions on sultan Selim’s coins in the form of writing the inscriptions of the obverse and reverse in horizontal lines inside two circles, along with the decoration of waves from left to right. Besides, the research shows the role of Jews in engraving the David’s star on sultan Selim’s coins for the first time in the history of Ottoman coinage, which was obvious between the lines of the reverse inscriptions.
topic Jews
the Sultan Selim I
coins
the Ottoman era
url http://jguaa.journals.ekb.eg/article_3003_ae18ec27d995e2ce72a0ed0cc471a3ca.pdf
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