February, 1911.] Annual Report. xxvii 
of numismatic interest. They are punched in four places, one 
of the punched areas containing the words “Shri Jagadeva’’ 
in characters of about the twelfth century. The find contained 
205 of these coins, but so far only 25 have been sent for exami- 
nation. A report on this find will appear in due course in the 
Numismatic Supplement. 
Most of the coins acquired as a result of the above exami- 
way in the near future to publishing a catalogue of more value 
from a numismatic and scientific point of view than the rough 
and inaccurate list recently issued. 
Search of Sanskrit Manuscripts. 
Notices of Sanskrit Manuscripts, Second Series, and an extra 
number of the Notices embodying the result of the examina- 
tion made by Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasida Sastri, M.A., 
in 1907 of the manuscripts added to the Darbar Library, 
Nepal, from 1898 to 1906. 
Of the manuscripts collected during the year, the most in- 
teresting is that of a unique work entitled Catuhsatika by 
dated N. 8. 649= 1469 A.D., has also been acquired. 
Six hundred and twenty five manuscripts have been exam- 
ined with a view to acquisition, but for want of funds they 
have not yet been acquired. : pee 
The extra number of the notices contains descriptions of 
many palm-leaf manuscripts which date from the 9th to the 
12th century A.D. ; one of them was written during the reign 
of Vigrahapala Deva at Balahanda, %.e., Balanda Pergana of 
modern times, within 20 miles of Calcutta, showing that there 
were Buddhist monasteries and Buddhist Pandits at that 
remote age (latter half of the 11th century) so far in south 
Be 
ngal. ae 
“Bibhiti Chandra was a great Buddhist writer in Bengal 
in the 13th century A.D. His place was the Jagaddal Vihara . 
