Logo Title
obverse
reverse
سامعي CC BY
Context
Years: 1974–1979
Issuer: Iran Issuer flag
Issuing organization: Bank Melli Iran
Demonetization: 1979
Total mintage: 292,000
Material
Diameter: 16.5 mm
Weight: 2.03 g
Gold weight: 1.83 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Gold (90% Gold, 10% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
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Reverse
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References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1198
Numista: #43951
Value
Bullion value: $304.16

Obverse

Description:
Pahlavi II portrait left, date beneath.
Inscription:
محمّدرضا شاه پهلوی آریامهر شاهنشاه ایران

۱۳۵۸
Translation:
Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, Aryamehr, Shahanshah of Iran

1358
Language: Persian

Reverse

Description:
Coat of arms with Pahlavi Crown, encircled by oak and olive wreaths.
Inscription:
ربع پهلوی
Translation:
One Quarter Pahlavi.
Language: Persian

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Tehran

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1974
1975106,000
1976186,000
1977
1978
1979

Historical background

In 1974, Iran’s currency situation was one of apparent strength, underpinned by a dramatic oil boom. Following the 1973 oil embargo and subsequent price shocks, global oil prices quadrupled. As a major OPEC producer, Iran's oil revenues surged from approximately $5 billion in 1973 to over $20 billion in 1974, flooding the state coffers with foreign exchange. The Iranian rial was stable and pegged to the U.S. dollar at a fixed rate of approximately 67.5 rials per dollar, a regime maintained by the Central Bank of Iran (Bank Markazi). This massive inflow created a powerful illusion of permanent prosperity and financial security for the Pahlavi monarchy.

However, this wealth precipitated severe economic distortions. The Shah’s government embarked on an overly ambitious and rapid modernization program, the so-called "Great Civilization," funneling petrodollars into massive infrastructure projects, military expansion, and industrial imports. This led to rampant inflation, estimated at over 15% annually, as domestic production could not keep pace with skyrocketing demand. The economy became dangerously overheated, with bottlenecks in ports and transportation, while the fixed exchange rate made imports artificially cheap, undermining local agriculture and nascent industries and increasing dependency on foreign goods.

Beneath the surface, the currency stability was fragile and artificially maintained. The spending spree was financed almost entirely by oil income rather than sustainable economic development, creating a classic "resource curse" scenario. The fixed exchange rate, while a symbol of stability, masked growing underlying pressures. When global oil demand eventually softened and revenues later in the decade failed to meet projections, the fundamental weaknesses were exposed, leading to balance of payments difficulties, depletion of reserves, and setting the stage for the severe economic crises of the late 1970s that contributed to the revolution. Thus, 1974 represented the peak of a boom that contained the seeds of its own collapse.
💎 Very Rare