Kushan Kingdom. Taxila mint. AE drachm. Wima Kadphises (c. 113-127). Obverse: King standing, right hand sacrificing over small altar, to left club and tamgha, Greek legend around. Reverse: God Shiva with two arms, holding trident and standing in front of bull Nandi, Kharoshthi legend around. MACW 3050-3054. This coin: Purchased from Tamco Numismatics at the Baltimore Whitman Coin Expo, November 9, 2023. (part of historical section is reused) The Kushans were originally one of five semi-nomadic tribes that constituted the Yuezhi confederation, which lived along the northwestern border of China. During the second century BCE the Yuezhi were forced to migrate west, into Bactria and nearby territories. Eventually, the Kushans conquered the other four tribes to assume leadership. The first true Kushan King is considered Kujula Kadphises (c. 50-90); we know the names of a few earlier Kushan rulers as part of the Yuezhi, but very little of this early history is known except in broad outline. The Kushans would quickly become a wealthy and important kingdom, controlling major trade routes between China, India, and Persia/Rome. They issued an abundant coinage in both gold and in bronze, though after a few scarce issues of the Yuezhi and (according to Joe Cribb) Kujula Kadphises they seem to have not issued silver coins. These coins depict an extensive and very mixed pantheon, including Indian, Iranian, Greek, and Central Asian deities, and even some scarce types depicting both the Shakyamuni Buddha (the historical Buddha) and the Maitreya Buddha (the future Buddha). The Kushan Kingdom broke apart in the 3rd century CE, with multiple independent local Kushan rulers and some territories acquired by the new Sasanian Empire of Persia. The remaining Kushan territories were lost to the Kidarite and Hephthalite Huns in the 5th century CE. Wima (also spelled Vima) Kadphises was the son of Wima Takhto and father of the great Kanishka I, and ruled c. 113-127. He was the first Kushan king to issue gold coinage, and he expanded Kushan territory in Afghanistan and northern India. His bronze coinage is rather monotonous, as almost all bear the same design as this coin (a rare type has the goddess Nanaia on reverse instead of Shiva). However, the denomination of this piece is less common. Most of his bronzes are of the size modern numismatists usually call a tetradrachm (~16 g weight), but this is the scarcer drachm (~4 g). I picked this coin out of a $20 per coin "you pick" group because I recognized its scarcity, and I also liked the smooth, dark patina and appreciated the reasonably high state of preservation for Kushan bronze. Overall, it's a rather nice little Kushan coin. Please post your related coins.
Very interesting coin @Parthicus. Mine is one of the first coins I posted here and is a AE Obv. Kanishka I Rev. Nana. 25mm and 15g. Not the greatest condition, but it is the only Kushan I have currently.
@paschka : I don't think your coin is Kushan (no Kushan bronzes have a female bust obverse as far as I am aware). The humped bull (zebu) on the reverse is typical of the Indian region, however. (If that is a humped- it might just be a winged bull.) Maybe it's some sort of Indo-Greek?
This is 100% humpback bull. And the female bust is clearly a Greek motif. I agree with you. This is most likely an early Indo-Greek coin. Possibly Bactria.
Nice fine @Parthicus - a while back I lucked into a scarcer denonmination of this type, a didrachm. At least I think that's what it is! Kushan Kingdom Æ Didrachm Vima Kadphises (c. 100-128 A.D.) King standing sacrificing at fire altar, club, tamgha & axehead-shafted trident in fields, Greek legend around / Siva standing w. trident & deerskin, bull Nandi right behind, Kharoshti legend. Göbl 763; MAC 3048-49. (8.66 grams / 20 mm) eBay Sept. 2019 $8.50 BIN Attribution Notes: Full legends: BACIΛEYC BACIΛEWN CWTHP MEΓAC OOHMO KAΔΦICHC/ maharajasa rajadirajasa sarvaloga isvarasa mahisvarasa Vima Kathphishasa tratara Coins India (coinindia.com): "...the rare di-drachm or half unit. These are hard to find."