This is the only thing I have to offer. Sasanian Kingdom, Yazgard I AR Drachm. WH mint, AD 399-420. Bust to right on floral ornament, wearing mural crown with frontal crescent and korymbos / Fire altar with ribbons flanked by two attendants, inscription on altar shaft; crescents and pellets flanking flames, mint to right. SNS Type 1b1/1a var. 5, pl. 55, 70; Göbl Type 1/1; Sunrise -. 4.14g, 29mm, 3h.
Thank you, I have found something I think is of interest to you: https://www.biddr.com/auctions/nac/browse?a=4514&l=5378092
I have two Peroz but not in gold... 459-484 Peroz - dirham from Goyman (GW) 459-484 Peroz - dirham from Hormizd-Ardashir (AW)
Maybe this will be of interest to you or somebody else here: https://www.numisbids.com/n.php?p=lot&sid=7909&lot=338
Hello, I'm new to the community. I was just wondering if anyone could tell me if this is real or not. thank you.https://ibb.co/ssrpD0y
I could not tell you if it is real or not, but you are not likely to get many eyes on it down here in a relatively old thread. You should start a new thread of your own. When buying coins like that it is more important to know that a dealer is trustworthy than to try to judge a coin from a picture. Sometimes you can tell a fake from a photo, and sometimes you can tell that a coin looks legit, but you can never be 100% sure it is real from a photo alone. Knowing the dealer is reliable is the key, and experienced collectors can help with that. (I'm not one in this area.)
I think it is genuine. It is the most common Sasanian type of which very many are offered every month. Not only does it look genuine, but I think if anyone were making fake Sasanian coins, they would pick some other, scarcer, type. By the way, unclipped examples weigh 4 grams or a bit more. If it is less than four grams, it will have been clipped (in antiquity) to illicitly harvest silver and hope to still pass the coin at full value.