Right field: The name
Ga-ḍa-ha-ra appears vertically in the right field as a
monogram.
Middle field: This issue has the name Pi-ro-ysa (
Pi-ro-ysa), thought to be
Peroz III Kushanshah, under the arm of the standing ruler.
[1]
Gadahara (
Brahmi:
Ga-
ḍa-ha-ra), sometimes Gadakhara (
Brahmi:
Ga-
ḍa-kha-ra),
[4] is a name appearing on numerous coins at the end of the
Kushan Empire or the beginning of the rule of the
Kidarite Huns in the area of Central and Western
Punjab in
India, in the period circa 350-375 CE.
[3]
[5]
The name
Ga-ḍa-ha-ra appears vertically as a monogram in the right field of the coins. Then several name appear under the arm of the ruler, including Yasada, Piroz, Kirada and Samudragupta.
[6]
It is not known with certainty whether Gadahara is actually the name of a ruler, or a clan, or a geographical region, [6] [5] although modern scholarship considers it is indeed the region of Gandhara. [7]
The appearance of the names of foreign rulers such as the
Kushano-Sassanian
Piroz (
Pi-ro-ysa) or the Samudra, Some historians speculated it to
Samudragupta (
Samudra) may suggest some kind of suzerainty at a time when the remnants of Kushan power were torn between these two powers.
[6]
[8]
The Gadahara coins may be the last of the Kushan coins before the invasion of the Kidarites. [5] But it is often thought that these coin actually were issued by the Kidarites themselves, who were invading the Kushan realm around that time, although they seem to come chronologically just before the issues of the famous Kidarite ruler Kidara. [2] [8] [3]
Right field: The name
Ga-ḍa-ha-ra appears vertically in the right field as a
monogram.
Middle field: This issue has the name Pi-ro-ysa (
Pi-ro-ysa), thought to be
Peroz III Kushanshah, under the arm of the standing ruler.
[1]
Gadahara (
Brahmi:
Ga-
ḍa-ha-ra), sometimes Gadakhara (
Brahmi:
Ga-
ḍa-kha-ra),
[4] is a name appearing on numerous coins at the end of the
Kushan Empire or the beginning of the rule of the
Kidarite Huns in the area of Central and Western
Punjab in
India, in the period circa 350-375 CE.
[3]
[5]
The name
Ga-ḍa-ha-ra appears vertically as a monogram in the right field of the coins. Then several name appear under the arm of the ruler, including Yasada, Piroz, Kirada and Samudragupta.
[6]
It is not known with certainty whether Gadahara is actually the name of a ruler, or a clan, or a geographical region, [6] [5] although modern scholarship considers it is indeed the region of Gandhara. [7]
The appearance of the names of foreign rulers such as the
Kushano-Sassanian
Piroz (
Pi-ro-ysa) or the Samudra, Some historians speculated it to
Samudragupta (
Samudra) may suggest some kind of suzerainty at a time when the remnants of Kushan power were torn between these two powers.
[6]
[8]
The Gadahara coins may be the last of the Kushan coins before the invasion of the Kidarites. [5] But it is often thought that these coin actually were issued by the Kidarites themselves, who were invading the Kushan realm around that time, although they seem to come chronologically just before the issues of the famous Kidarite ruler Kidara. [2] [8] [3]