332 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [August, 1909. 
viously published, I have appended to this Note lists of the 
mints of the various emperors represented, and short references 
to the more interesting coins. 
came across two mohurs of Farrukh Siyar of apparently 
a new mint, Sikakul. Through the kindness of Mr. Burn I have 
been enabled to identify this place with Chicacole or Srikaku- 
am, a town in Ganjim District, Madras Presidency, situated 
four miles from the sea on the Langiliya river, and on the 
Grand Trunk Road. The town was the capital of the Mughal 
sarkar of Chicacole. 
In his Introduction to Volume III of the new Indian 
Some fifteen of various dates were found at Bahawalptr. In 
view of the remarks made in this Introduction, which has been 
of great assistance to me, the following mohurs are of especial 
interest. 
EMPEROR. Mint. 
Shah Jahan. ‘ Lakhnau. 
‘Alamgir IL. Multan. 
Muhammad. Aurangabad. 
Another apparently new mint is Derajit. What may be a 
new type of mohur of Shah ‘Alam Bahadur I is of interest, as 
are half mohurs of Muhammad Shah minted at Sind. e 
reverse side of these exhibits an unusual inscription. Fuller 
references to these and other matters interesting to the numis- 
matist are made later in this Note. 
The lists of selected Durrani coins do not 
call for comment. One mohur of Ahmad 
Shah, bearing the Hijra date on the reverse side, appears to be 
of an Army Mint—see Army Mint of the Shahs of Persia on 
page 169 of Dr. Codrington’s ‘ Musalman Numismatics. 
Miscelléneous, iscellaneous gold coins included many 
4 mohurs of Nadir Shah and the Qajar 
Shahs of Persia. There were some thousands of ducats. 
Shah Jahan. There are only eleven mohurs of Shah 
Durrani. 
mohur is dated A.H. 1048 (jalus 11), and that of Lakhnau is 
— 1051 (jalus 15). Neither appears to have been published 
efore—see Mr. Nelson Wright’s Introduction to Volume III of 
the Indian Museum Catalogue. 
