Abdagases I

Abdagases, Seistan (Circa 1st c. CE). Tetradrachm. Obv BASILEUONTOC BASILEWN ABDAGASOU. Rev 'Guduvharabhradaputrasa Maharajasa Avadagashasa' in Kharoshthi, Zeus.
Coin of Abdagases.
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 some of his coins, who ruled during the first decades of the 1st century AD. Though he never assumed the title of Gondophares, he was an important successor of his uncle, ruling his Indian conquests.

The bilingual coin illustrated here 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.

Depiction of the Indo-Parthian king Abdagases (50–65 CE), from his coins.[1]

Notes


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