124 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [N.S:, XVII 
Sher Shah and Islam Shah maintained a mint for copper coins 
at Malot, and a few silver issues of the former are known, 
Mulk-i-Tilang. 
This reading has been much disputed, but is now accepted 
as the place at which a rare type of gold coin bearing the 
the product of the expedition led by his son, Fakhru-d-din 
-Juna, better known as Muhammad bin Tughlaq. As no town 
is specified, it is presumed that the issue occurred during the 
first siege of Warangal, afterwards styled Sulganpar (q.v.) by 
its conqueror. The name reappears in 725H. on the posthu- 
mous gold and silver coins of Tughlaq. 
Multan. 
Copper coins attributed to Altamsh, but bearing no name 
of the ruler, were struck at Multan. Thereafter the place 
disappears from the coinage till the days of the Mughal Empire. 
Nagor see Gaur. 
Narnol. 
This town had from the first a close connection with the 
Suci dynasty, as Ibrahim Khan, the grandfather of Sher 
Shah, died here, after having helda jagir in that neighbourhood 
be read Shahr Patna, but this is mere conjecture, and further it 
1S questionable whether Patna was a city of any importance at 
that period. Its rise dates from the foundation of the fort by 
Sher Shah in 948, for which see Rasialpir 
Qanauj. 
See Shergadh ’urf Qanauj and Shihgadh. 
