96 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal: [N.S., XVII, 
dite ake ‘Tab., Akb.,’ 331. 
‘Aba Turab.,’ 100. 
debae ase ‘ Bad,,’ 11, 28, 36, 39, 57, 59, 85, 187, 
204, 213, 267, 285, 287, 300, 311. 
334 
‘Akb. Nam., II, 12, 189, 198. 
‘ Abu Turab.,’ 95, 96, 99. 
‘ Bad. Nam..,’ I, ii, 281. 
ae ee TE 406. 
‘‘Alam. Nam ,’ 743, 882, 977. 
‘ Maas. ‘Alam.,’ 28, 49, 108, 130, 140. 
143, 214, 271, 272, 285, 364. 
‘Kh. Bh.” Ty 413; 
alles (clay gle «Akb. Nam.,’ TIT, 259. 
groS olT wra;i ‘Alam. Nam.,’ 835. - 
WES ibys wlivgaia ‘Bad. Nam.,’ I, i, 47, 62, 68,114, 237, 
478, 542. 
vs gos, TOG. 
ci hay Oy 9, 4b: 16 107, 
‘Alam. Nam.,’ 565. 
* Maas, ‘Alam.,’ 91. 
‘Kh. Kh.,’ 40, 971. 
wh (2s ylinsrie “Alam Nam,’ 605, 628. 
A glance at this long list of References will be sufficient to 
show that the historical evidence is in fair accord with the 
Numismatic. Leaving out non-descript or colourless appella- 
tions like tol; - jody -8ah- LS - Gyaliyty - yaw - oe™ ete. and their ~ 
compounds, we can reckon in all about thirty really distinctive 
titles on the Coins. Of these, about eighteen are found 
in the histories. Of the dozen of which there is no trace in 
the chronicles, about six— wea GleYytys - 256 whys - 3 pote 
Melee - ywdio allodtyty = Atom ypaiell iy - and Cyylia Cpslfligio 
belong to the period of disruption and anarchy of which no 
really satisfactory or exhaustive Persian history has been 
published. Of the six which remain, one Jpila, $a fob 
is found only on a single coin, two others were invented by the 
weak and vain Humayan, and their vogue is restricted to about 
Six years in all. The absence of w9Ss0 paledty!o may be satis- 
factorily explained by the fact that Dogiaon itself is but once 
mentioned in the fifteen hundred pages of the ‘ Akbarnama,’ 
and that the name occurs but twice in the almost equally 
voluminous Ain-i-Akbari. There isno reference to Sle} padnce 
olf! in the chronicles, but I have called attention to its 
