APPENDIX. ^™ 



By Lieut.. Colonel Charles HoPKiNSON.-(Continued.) 

 A tobacco pipe. 

 A necklace. 



An ear ornament for men. 

 A set of tattooing instruments. 



Three small bells used for hanging round the spires of the temples. 

 The model of a carrier's cart. 

 The model of a plough. 



Tlie model of a mill for husking paddy. 



Two fragments of a flint with a conchoidal fracture. 



A small round chunam box and cover. 



Bv Professor Charles Martin Frjehn, F.M.R.A.b. 



' A Chinese copper coin, having the inscription Keen lung tung pan on the obverse, 



and Ush in Mongol and Tataric on the reverse. • a H 743 Arabic 



A small silver coin of Chaum Begh Khak, minted m New Sara. A.H. 743, Arabic 



and Mongolian. 

 T.„ T ieut -Col James Caulf.eld, Political Resident at Kotah, M.R.A.S. I^ov.3, IJJ. 

 ^' A H nduastrolmical instrument, called Junter M,, which with one o^^^^^^^^^ 



shews the sun's altitude, the hour, and the situation of all the planets. 



By the late Rev. S. Weston, B.D. M.R.A.S ^--^^ ^' ''^^^ 



A Chinese card or note-case, made of tin, painted. 



,« T, A o November 3, \S27. 



Bv Colonel William FARonHAR, M.K.A.!5 



A necklace of yellow glass beads, worn by Chinese Mandarins. 



A pair of Chinese silver-mounted ivory chopsticks. 



Thirty-one specimens of the timber woods produced in Malacca. 



Three painted wooden shields used by the Dayaks in ^^^ ^ -'"J °^„f ^r^.^dles 



Two swords, with barbed points, and ornamented with hair tufts on the handles, 



used by ditto. 

 One battle-axe, ditto. 

 One club, ditto. 

 Five spears, ditto. 

 Four Malay spears, mounted in gold. 



r^ T -u • Tj A <s November 17, 1827. 



By Lieut-Colonel James Tod, Librarian R.A.S ••-••"•••• 



Two copper plates, containing grants to the temple of Nadali in Marwar. 



Two smaller copper plates, with Coptic inscriptions. f^^^y^^^A^ of the 



A a,ap or stamp, representing the lotus used for marking the foreheads of 



Vishnuvite pilgrims at Dwarica. • i f„„ 



A cS; or stanfp, representing the conjoined triangles inclosing a circle, for 

 marking the foreheads of the Sivite pilgrims at Dwarica. 



