326 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [August, 1909. 
trace of & (I.M.C. (Wright) No, 642); and 3 were from a die 
with [ ,£] ss! apparently in one line, as on pl. iii, 6. None 
had dates or regnal years.] 
The Akburnaéma mentions Jalnapur in connection with 
History, vii, p. 11, note). The distance is 39 miles. Old Jalna 
city is in ruins. The mint name was first read and the location 
of the mint identified by Mr. Nelson Wright. (Cp. Num. Supp. 
III, art 24.) 
Suan ‘Anam II. 
No.7. Balanagar-Gadha. Lat. 23° 10’ N ., Long. 
79° 56’ 30” E. D. 1207 H.—33. W.170. S.°8. 
Obverse. Reverse, 
IPey wpe 
MeO Od ola a} Wheto 
as re 
| Bes F pls xls cle dane 
ps Sra ~~ ~y— 
DS HL yy 95 lesS , 6 yb 
_ Over 60 rupees of Shah ‘Alam IT from the Balanagar-Gadha 
mint were recently found in Sagar city, C.P., of all regnal years 
from 26 to 38. The mint is seldom legible. On those of the 
of the 26th year (1199) and 29th year (1202) only of this type 
had the Hijri years in full. From the 33rd to the 38th year in- . 
cluded the type is shown in Pl ili, 7, a rupee from this find. 
The rupees a 33rd year only of the latter type had the 
ave enquired at Jabalpir and Sagar and have been un- 
able to hear of a Balanagar-Gadha. This may for a time 
have been a name of Garha, or Gadha, now an unimportant 
town close to the west side of Jabalpir onthe road to the 
Marble Rocks. 
~ I gather from Prinsep’s Use/ul Tables that the Balanagar- 
Gadha rupees formed the class popularly known under the name 
of Balasahi, so called (p. 28) from Balaji Pandit, the officer who 
first issued them. Prinsep (p. 53) refers to the Balasahi as the 
~ 
