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سكة العلويين من خلال المتحف العمومي الوطني سيرتا: دراسة وصفية تحليلية

العنوان بلغة أخرى: Alaouine’s Money in the National Public Museum of Cirta: Descriptive Analytical Study
المصدر: مجلة عصور الجديدة
الناشر: جامعة وهران 1 أحمد بن بلة - مختبر تاريخ الجزائر
المؤلف الرئيسي: رزقي، فهيمة (مؤلف)
المؤلف الرئيسي (الإنجليزية): Rezki, Fahima
المجلد/العدد: مج8, ع1
محكمة: نعم
الدولة: الجزائر
التاريخ الميلادي: 2018
التاريخ الهجري: 1439
الشهر: ماي
الصفحات: 111 - 126
DOI: 10.54240/2318-008-001-006
ISSN: 2170-1636
رقم MD: 1172096
نوع المحتوى: بحوث ومقالات
اللغة: العربية
قواعد المعلومات: HumanIndex
مواضيع:
كلمات المؤلف المفتاحية:
Far Morocco | The Alawites Sultans | Coins Alawites | Gold Coins | Silver Coins | Copper Coins | Raw Material | Silver | Copper | Currency Industry Techniques | Decoration
رابط المحتوى:
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المستخلص: "The Alawites sultans have minted coins from various metals in the Far Morocco in the middle of the seventeenth century. The local labels of these coins were varied in the Far Maghreb, where they were sometimes labeled according by names of Sultans traded on the Alawi government beginning from the seventeenth century AD including the Rashidiya, the Ismailia, the Muhammadiyah And Sulaymaniyah currency..., and in other times they attributed to their place of the settlement like the Almknasi dirham, and sometimes to the value of the exchange such as the Five Dinar that equals five bracelets, the Six Dinar that equals six bracelets as they were attributed to caliber. The National Public Museum of Cirta in Constantine retains many Alawi coins minted along the period of the mid-eighteenth century and the nineteenth century AD. This period, in particular, witnessed a variation in the monetary system of the Maghreb. The first phase that represents the Mid eighteenth century AD knew a limited spread of foreign currencies, and the prevalence and popularity of the two basic units recognized in the Islamic monetary system in general and the Moroccan in particular which are the gold and silver coins. However, the second phase defined in the nineteenth c entury AD k new t he deterioration of the Moroccan Alawite currency where it witnessed the dominance of foreign currency which has become the contender of the Moroccan monetary system represented by the Spanish real and the French real. Moreover, the cash models preserved in Cirta Museum were characterized by their various types and names starting with their raw material of silver and copper, their weight and the period in which they were minted, as well as a variety of decoration, especially engineering, in addition to recording mintage house and date without mentioning Sultans’ names."

ISSN: 2170-1636