, king of the Elymais, and his wife
Anzaze The
coins of Elymais depicted a king; it is not known whether this was a
Parthian king or a local ruler, as such information has not come to light. These coins were based on
Greek standards of debased
Drachms and
Tetradrachms. The royal picture is generally based on Parthian coinage, usually with an anchor with a star in crescent figure. The reverse has a figure or bust of
Artemis with text around it, an eagle, or often only elongated dots (this has led
numismatists to believe that the
engravers didn't know Greek or copied from coins whose writing was already unintelligible). A variant of
Aramaic, which was more conservative than the contemporary
Late Old Eastern Aramaic spoken in eastern Mesopotamia, has been recorded in Elymais until the rise of the
Sasanians. The chancellery of Elymais developed its own variant of the
Aramaic alphabet, which was characterized by
cursive letters and frequent use of
ligatures, apparently influenced by the contemporary
Parthian chancellery script. However, there is no evidence that Aramaic was a spoken language in Elymais. It is recorded only in coins (since Orodes III) and inscriptions, such as those of
Tang-e Sarvak. == List of kings ==