
RR silver damma, Muhammad I (c.720s/50s CE), sub-governor of Multan, Abbasids (F/T#M32)
Arabic Lillah/ Fanasr/ Fat’h Ghāz/d ("In God, conquering warrior is victorious") // Stylized fire altar of three dots, stylized Sharada “Sri” above, “ta” to left and “pa” to right, auxiliary marks around, Arabic Muhammad Lillah / Amir ("Amir Muhammad in God") below. 13mm, 0.48 grams, Multan mint. Fishman/Todd "The Silver Damma" Type M32.
These coins are among the earliest Multani coins giving a Muslim name. Correlating this “Muhammad” with other Muhammads recorded in the histories is next to impossible. This name was, of course, a very common one, so it is hard to identify him with the various known Muhammads from the governors’ lists. With the exception of Muhammad bin Qasim, Sindh did not have governors named Muhammad until ca. 775 CE (there were, in fact, at least four governors named “Muhammad” during the Abbasid period, ruling in the last quarter of the 8th century CE), so Muhammad I must have been a local Amir of Multan, subject to the current governor of Sindh. Listing the name of the local Amir, and not the governor of Sindh or the Caliph, may perhaps indicate the degree of independence enjoyed by the local Multani Amir, ruling a rich city far from the centers of the Sindhi and Caliphal governments.
These coins are studied in detail in "The Silver Damma" by Fishman and Todd, now a standard catalogue for this sort of small silver coinage.