Vol. V, No. 9.] Numismatic Supplement. 385 
[N.S.] 
to have issued from that mint. None have as yet been dis- 
covered either of gold or of copper : all are of silver, and all are 
full rupees. Fourteen are in my cabinet, and, excluding dupli- 
cates, five others are mentioned in the Catalogues of the Coins 
in the British, the Indian, and the Lahor Muse 
The earliest specimen hitherto published is <e ‘Shah Jahan 
rupee dated 32-1069 (L.M.C., page 173, No. 83). Its Obverse 
exhibits the Kalima in a square area, while the right-hand margin 
records the Hijri year 1069. The legend in the Square area of 
the Reverse is the normal 
als gl_ eb 
Pepe MEBNT TSE 
ee ale 
with the regnal year rr entered over the a. The left-hand 
margin registers the mint-name 3 Ly Rb. 
ext in chronological sequence come four coins of Aurang- 
zeb, dated respectively !o-!—1069, oa} —1070, 3—1070, 
and 3—1071, all of which bear on the Obverse the eee (a0 
legend, while ob1,26 occupies the top lines of the Reve 
n follow five rupees ranging in date from the th 5 the 
22nd seat year of Aurangzeb, with the _»i~ 5° »e couplet on 
the Obverse, and st!,2£ now on the lowest line of the Reverse. 
From the 27th. till the 49th year seven specimens are known 
all of the same type as the preceding, but with substituted 
for oe 
is safer nat to include i in this list the one coin of Shah 
type, and with legends that read as follow :— 
Obverse : ) x pls 
slo gldgh 
ah 
Reverse : ey '* 
