Kushano-Sasanian Kingdom Kushanshah from 330 to 365
Varahran Kushanshah
Coin of Varahran Kushanshah in Kushan style, Balkh mint. The obverse still has the traditional Nandipada symbol, before the Kidarite tamgha was introduced.
Unlike his immediate predecessors, Varahran's domains only included Tukharistan, as both Gandhara and Kabul had been incorporated into the Sasanian Empire by the Sasanian King of KingsShapur II (r. 309–379).[3][4][5] Varahran did not issue coins in Gandhara, and his predecessor Peroz II is the last known Kushano-Sassanian ruler to do so.[5] After that point Shapur II issued his own coinage from Kabul.[3][4][5]
Varahran Kushanshah wears a distinctive crown on his coinage, which is flat-topped with a crown ball and florets, and pearls or lotus petals as a decoration on the sides.[6][7] In the second phase of his reign, the coinage of Varahran minted in Balkh incorporated the Kidarite tamga () replacing the nandipada () which had been in use since Vasudeva I,[6] suggesting that the Kidarites had now taken control, first under their ruler Kirada.[8] Ram horns were added to the effigy of Varahran on his coinage for a brief period under the Kidarite ruler Peroz, and raised ribbons were added around the crown ball under the Kidarite ruler Kidara.[9][8] In effect, Varahran has been described as a "puppet" of the Kidarites.[10]
Traditionally, these variations in the coin types of Varahran, especially the modifications of the symbols and the figure of the ruler on the obverse while maintaining the regnal legend with the name "Varahran", were explained by supposing the existence of additional rulers named Varahran, such as a "Varahran II Kushanshah" or a "Varahran III Kushanshah".[11] According to modern scholarship however, there was only one Varahran, whose coinage went under several phases under the authority of the Kidarite rulers Kirada, Peroz and Kidara.[11]
By 365, the Kidarite ruler Kidara I was placing his name on the coinage of the region, and assumed the title of Kushanshah.[8] In Gandhara too, the Kidarites minted silver coins in the name of Varahran, until Kidara also introduced his own name there.[8]
Cribb, Joe (1990). "Numismatic Evidence for Kushano-Sasanian Chronology". Studia Iranica. 19/2 (2). P. Geuthner: 151–193. doi:10.2143/SI.19.2.2014452. The attribution of the Varahran coins between the first group and the Kidara coins has normally been explained by the creation of a Varahran (II) issuing the fourth group and (III) issuing the fifth group, with the first, second and third groups attributed to Varahran (I).
Daryaee, Touraj; Rezakhani, Khodadad (2017). "The Sasanian Empire". In Daryaee, Touraj (ed.). King of the Seven Climes: A History of the Ancient Iranian World (3000 BCE - 651 CE). UCI Jordan Center for Persian Studies. pp. 1–236. ISBN978-0-692-86440-1.