Vol. V, No. 7.] Notes on Gaur and other old Places. 219 
[N.S.] 
din, seized his territory on which Fakhru-d-din’s son-in-law Zafar 
Khan fled, and after much wandering took refuge with Sultan 
Firoz, and that this led to Firoz’s second invasion of Bengal 
in 760 H.! The coins show, however, that Fakhru-d-din 
and not from. Fakhru-d-din. 
The coins of Ilyas Shah show three mints, Firozabad, 
: Sunargaon (from 753 H.), and Shahr-i- 
foe es nau (74*, 754 H.). In some coins Firoza- 
badis called distinctly ‘‘the capital”; and in other coins 
Siinargiion is entitled Hazrat Jalal.’ I have already identified 
name seems to be borrowed from Delhi where Kilughari in its 
neighbourhood was similarly called the new city in the time of 
‘ud-din Firoz Shah Khalji. No public works 
bath of Delhi.+ This might be the same whose remains have 
been found in Sataisghar, a mile east of Adina mosque, viz., & 
from one of which a passage runs to another large oblong room 
besides other rooms. 
Sikandar Shah, the only Sultan without any surname, suc- 
. ed, but in which year it is not clear. 
gee epeh, His father’s coins exist up to 758 H.; 
whi 
Sikandar Shah have been found, from 750 to 754, 758 and 
759 H. with Firozabad, and 756 to 759 H. with Sunargaon 
mint.’ It would thus appear that the prince was In rebellion 
es ee eh ET eg el il alate er oar, 
1 Elliot, iii, pp. 303-5, l.c., Riyaz. p 104, footnote 1. 
2 Fakh Hed i, } 
. li, p. 149, No. 20; Ikhtiyar’s coins of 751-3 H. 
‘AS.B., 1873, p. 254 (753 H.), MM... Ry p: 
). For Ilyas’ coin of Sunargaon, dated 753 Hes J 
nd I.M 
04, 
i: 
2 id ve pe i 
pe 149, No. 21 
(751 
a7 
Cc 
= R.AS., ii, 
8 For coi ‘th ital,’ ‘te 
Bee cialll (ine weak OF cinjesty), E.6-A.B 1804,'p. 66; for 
i 
hr-i-nau coins, ibid., and 1.M.U. 
seh 0 
Vv remarkably versat 
Khusra in his Kiranu-s-sa’dain (Elliot, iii, p. 525). _ : 
6 For Ilyas’ coin of 758 H., J.R.A.S., 11, PP: 206, 207, I.M.C., ii, 
ilt by I-yal-timish, ar ired by Su , 
ber sr by I-yal-timish, and repaired Dy t oc past’ Manic 
