
Al-Sultan al-Adil / Khyzr Khan / Khalad Mulkeh ("The Just Khyzr Khan, may his rule last") // Zarb Sarai al-Jadid ("Struck in Sarai al-Jadid"), 761 in a number of lines. Dated to 761 AH/1360 AD. 17mm, 1.42 grams. Mint of Sarai al-Jadid. Sagdeeva #303.
The location of Sarai al-Jadid ("New Sarai") is not completely certain - the current consensus is that it was located near the site of Selitrennoe Gorodishche on lower Volga, in modern Russia.
Khyzr (or Khizr), briefly ruled the Golden Horde in 761-762 AH (1360-61 CE) for less then two years, was a descendant of Shiban, the fifth son of Jochi, and thus part of the extended Borjigin royal lineage. His reign occurred during a period of intense political fragmentation following the death of Khan Berdi Beg, when rival factions and noble clans vied for power in rapid succession. Little is known about Khyzr's policies or achievements, and his time as khan was short and contested and he was murdered by his successor, Timur-Khoja. His emergence reflects the deepening instability of the Golden Horde in the mid-14th century, as central authority collapsed and multiple Jochid branches struggled for control.