82 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [N.S. XVII, 
poo! Ssllet) 2i..0 were struck when the imperial head- 
quarters were at or in the vicinity of the town. The recru- 
descence of the Rajput troubles compelled him to leave 
rhanptr in Sha‘aban 1121 A.H., and he was again at 
Ajmer for some months in the next year. Then the insurrec- 
tion of the Sikhs drove him to the Panjab, and his camp was 
pitched at Lahor in Jumada I, 1122 A.H., where it remained 
till his death in Muharram 1124 A.H. 
Sl)} ;2imwe continued to be the epithet of Akbarabad in 
the reign of Jahandar, and the first four years of Farrukhsiyar. 
Some time in the 5th year of the latter, another change took 
place. Its old epithet e!UsJ|_,2ime was restored to Akbarabad, 
and Ajmer was deprived of it and ordered to be called yssly!s 
as before. cle!) jaime itself was transferred to ‘Azimabad 
(Patna). But there was for some time a certain amount of 
confusion, and on the coins of the 3rd, 4th and 5th years, 
Akbarabad and ‘Azimabad are both styled Sle!) :ai—- (P.M.C. 
Nos. 2163-6 and 2230-33). 
Sle)} Rime ‘Resting place of sovereignty.’ We have seen 
that when Ajmer was entitled ~s%sJ) Ai..<, Akbarabad came 
to be called —de)t ,Si.0, When their old titles were restored 
to Akbarabad and Ajmer, Ae! aime remained unappropriated 
and was available for transference to some other town. The 
imperial choice descended upon ‘Azimabad (Patna), and the 
reason of the same is not difficult to divine. 
daula Khan-i-Khanan Bahadur and proceed to Court. Arriving 
in Patna he made a halt, and put forward his want of means 
and the approach of the rainy season as excuses for delay. 
ay ps cb e) demo GILL whe cgelyy wrltngg ys enter cyard wy? 
wr owas Soyo jt ly ya aad deme odly ly Ey be eepil ale 5! 
wl OMS le oh woe] tay Syley abd lis pre «205 yor Glad yy Gab 
# dua8 abs uly gf BKe yg BI,5 wel) sols ghee 
Bibl. Ind. Text, II, 708, ll. 5-10. 
1s conjuncture, several Dervishes acquainted 
with the mathematical sciences together with a physician 
*’ 
