Coins of the Indo-Parthian king Abdagases, in which his clothing is clearly apparent. He wears baggy trousers, rather typical of Parthian clothing.
Coins of the Indo-Parthian king Abdagases, in which his clothing is clearly apparent. He wears baggy trousers and a crossover jacket.
Abdagases I was an Indo-Parthian king, a nephew of Gondophares evident from his coin — a copper Tetradrachm. He continued ruling up to ca. 65 AD. The bilingual coin exhibits the kharoshti script where it can be read as "Gudaphara brathaputrasa maharajasa Abadagashasa." Brathaputra means nephew in Prakrit, the language in the coin. Zeus is also depicted in the same face. Coin of Gondophares (20-50 AD), first king of the Indo-Parthians kingdom. ... Coin of Gondophares (20-50 CE), first king of the Indo-Parthians. ... ISO 4217 Code GRD User(s) Greece Inflation 3. ... For other uses, see number 65. ... The Kharoṣṭhī script, also known as the Gāndhārī script, is an ancient alphabetic script used by the Gandhara culture of historic northwest India to write the Gandhari and Sanskrit languages (the Gandhara kingdom was located along the present-day border... Prakrit (also spelt Pracrit) (Sanskrit: , original, natural, artless, normal, ordinary, usual, i. ... The Statue of Zeus at Olympia Phidias created the 12-m (40-ft) tall statue of Zeus at Olympia about 435 BC. The statue was perhaps the most famous sculpture in Ancient Greece, imagined here in a 16th century engraving Zeus (in Greek: nominative: Zeús, genitive: DÃos), is...
Depiction of the Indo-Parthian king Abdagases (50-65 CE), from his coins.[1]
Coin of Gondophares (20-50 CE), first king of the Indo-Parthians. ... Coin of Gondophares (20-50 CE), first and greatest king of the Indo-Parthian Kingdom. ...
The depiction of Abdagases II is very similar to that of Pacores, the last Indo-Parthian king in Seistan; the Greek legend copies the well-known, stereotyped Parthian Greek legend.
Apparently Abdagases, who specifies he is Gondophares' nephew (Senior, types 226-230; coin l), initially ruled at the same time as Gondophares, as his title ("king," and not "great king of kings") and coin weight suggest.
Few coins of Abdagases (Senior, type 232), Sarpedones (coin n), and Ubouzanes (Senior, types 254, 260; coin m) have been found; Sases, who is attested in a wider area, seems to have ruled longer, as the number of his coins and the variety of mintmark combinations suggest (Senior, type 246).
Indo-Parthian, Abdagases (c.5 B.C. 19), Taxila, AR Tetradrachm, king on horseback riding right, wearing Parthian dress and holding whip aloft, Gondopharan Tamgha before horse, rev. Zeus Nikephoros standing left with sceptre, monograms in both fields (Senior 228.20; M.1121), about very...
Indo-Parthian, Abdagases, Gandhara, base AR tetradrachms (2), the first with king riding right, the second with king riding left, Greek legends around, rev. Zeus standing right, holding sceptre, monograms in both fields, Kharosthi legend around (Senior 227.18, 229.38), both good very fine (2)...
Indo-Parthian, Abdagases, base AR Tetradrachm, 9.83g., Gandhara, king on horseback riding left, wearing Parthian dress Gondopharan tamgha and letter before horse, rev. Zeus standing right, holding sceptre, circle between legs, nandipada in left field, letter in right, (Senior 229.51), good...