482 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [December, 1914. 



For the inscription compare I.M.C., Vol. II, No. 80. I call 



this Gujarat type A, with reference to this hoard. 



3. As No. 2, but corrupt. Type B. 





4. Obverse. The Kalima— as arranged in Akbar's early 



t^S\ 



Reverse 



vJlx xk J 



aiXc alJ| tyla. 



Type C. This is a confusion with No. 6. *£l* aUi *l* is 

 taken from the coins of Muzaffar Shah III of Gujarat. On 

 some coins there appears to be a mixture of this with the 



formula aJLWj i$$jJ| 



5. Obverse. — Corruption of 



Reverse. — As No. 4. 

 ^ Type D. Here we have a mixture of the legends of a 

 Gujarat and a Malwa coin. The curious and distinctive mark y>< 

 is probably derived from the Malwa coins of Nasir Shah Khalji 



(Cf. T.M.C. No. 77). 



6. Akbar. 



Obverse. — The Kalima (early arrangement) surrounded by 



a border of dots. 



Reverse — j£\ *L2ol 



is) u 



vi*!\ JJU 



Surrounded by a border of dots. 



Type A. By the fineness of execution this would appear 

 to be the first coin of this type, but curiously the word *>♦»■* 



does not appear to be present on the reverse. The design is 

 evidently copied from the Ahmadabad coins. This and the 

 following coin would seem to have been struck by Imperial 

 authority, and one cannot help comparing them with the 

 Mahmudis of Gujarat which start in 989 a.h. 1 do not think 

 this type has been published before. The only reference I can 



