xxii Annual Report. [February, 1913. 
Vajrayana School of the Buddhists. The commentary is 
written by a very great man, Krsnacaryya or Kahnapada, one 
of the founders of the Sahajiyaé School. A mutilated copy of 
the commentary in Bengali Law of 1198 is to be found in 
Cambridge. 
Coins, 
g 
were presented to the Cabinet during 1911. Of these the only 
one of more than ordinary interest was the gold coin presented 
which are the words ‘‘Sri Jagadeva.’ The coin may have 
been struck by a Jagadeva who reigned in South India about 
the 12th century (cf. Elliot’s Coins of Southern India). The 
reverse of the coin is blank. 
others, two were Gadhiya coins, two (billon) of the 
Pathan series, six Mughal, one Durrani, one of Nadir Shah, 
one (copper) of the Gujarat Sultanat, three of Native States. 
even coins were presented by the Bombay Branch of the 
Royal Asiatic Society, three by the Central Provinces Govern- 
ment, two by the Commissioner of Ajmere and two by the 
Agent to the Governor-General in Central India. 
The Numismatic Secretary examined twelve finds consist- 
ing of 300 coins during the year for the Central Provinces and 
Punjab Government. None of these finds contained any coin 
of unusual interest. 
Search for Arabic and Persian MSS. 
8 for this purpose, and it is proposed to publish even- 
tually lists of the whereabouts of such important MSS. as the 
ociety have so far discovered. 
n compliance with a request made by the Librarian of 
the Imperial Libra ’ Maulavi Qasim Hasir was allowed to 
assist in the preparation of a Catalogue raisonné of the books 
