80 N. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [N.S., XIX, 
The pattern for this coin was I think one of the Agra 
mint, the Obv. legend of which was SUy (U5 9 pmd S51 ppt yoo} dhe 
the most part of which the engrav er has failed to copy. 
A. Size 6. Weight, 73 grs.’ 
(Numismatic - Chronic le, Third ori Vol. XV. 1895, 
pp. 69-70. The coin is figured ig Mae A 
But if Sundar compelled Bharaji dy ieee and pro- 
claim his subjection on his own coins, he did not stop there. 
We may take it that the Khutba was recited in the name of 
the emperor and that a few coins also were stamped with his 
master’s titles, in commemoration of this triumph. As these 
pieces were to ‘“‘ make manifest to the comprehension” of the 
multitude, that the province had now definitely passed eee 
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The coin in the Panis Museum is the Saly surviving § specimen 
of the few pieces, which were struck on the occasion, for being 
Ww Héten with a ‘Wav’ and not without it 
These objections are, however, tat answered. The fact 
is that both forms are correct and zor as well as 8 ze and 
gt! are found in good writers. 6 gr occurs in the Tabagat- 
t-Akbart (Lucknow Litho , p. 364, 1. 24). rh aot! in the 
Mirat-i-Ahmadi, (Bombay Litho., Part II, 152). Elsewhere, 
in the same work, we find the name of the town is written 
és (Part I, p. 26,1 2). The capital of Rao Bhara is 
mentioned twice in the Mirat-i-Sikandari as ot (Bombay 
Litho., 1831 A.C, p. 137, 1. 5; p. 454, 1. 6; Fazil aoe 
o 
Trans. pp. 83, 327). Abil Faz] also in his account 
Stba of Gujarat oe us that “on _ west of the Ran lies 
chief i is at se a8 ( et? ot? ots soft) Ain-i-Akbari, Text, I, 
392, 1.7; Jarrett II, 250. It will be seen that the first or 
really material art of "es name is written by Akbar’s minister 
just as it is on the c 
Passing on to esebcan writers, I find in a “‘ Memoir and 
