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Part of a hoard of silver currency

-699/-600

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

This group of silver objects is probably the most important find at the Median site of Tepe Nush-i Jan. They were packed inside a bronze bowl and buried in the floor. Although the hoard was probably buried in the late seventh century BC, some of the items are very much older. The spiral beads and pendant probably date from the end of the third or beginning of the second millennium BC, suggesting that they had been found by Iron Age grave-robbers and were about to be recycled as scrap for their metal value. Nush-i Jan is one of the most important site of the Medes yet excavated. Four principal buildings were discovered: two temples, a columned hall and a fortified structure. It was probably the centre for a local ruler, and construction seems to have been started around 750 BC. By the sixth century, however, Nush-i Jan was reduced to a small, insignificant site, thus reflecting the general change in fortunes of Media as the state was taken by the Achaemenids during the mid-sixth century BC. The Medes were closely related to the Persians and were located around the area of modern Hamadan (ancient Ecbatana). The Assyrian records of the time list the Medes among many population groups. In 614 BC a Median king, Cyaxares, gathered sufficient forces to sack some of the great Assyrian cities (Ashur and Tarbisu) and with the Babylonians Nineveh in 612 BC. In 550 BC Cyrus of Persia fought off an attack by Cyaxares' son Astyages and took over the Median state which spread from western Iran through the former kingdom of Urartu (in eastern Anatolia) into what is now central Turkey.

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  • Title: Part of a hoard of silver currency
  • Date Created: -699/-600
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 2.50cm; Width: 2.50cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: hammered
  • Registration number: 1969,0211.1
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Tepe Nush-i Jan
  • Period/culture: Median; Iron Age
  • Material: silver
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Donated by British Institute of Persian Studies
British Museum

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