13. NUMISMATIC SUPPLEMENT No. XVII. 
Note.—The numeration of the article below is continued 
rom p. 712 of the ‘Journal and Proceedings”’ for 
IgII. : 
101. Corms or GANerya Deva, with PLATE. 
val India which had been found in mauza Isurpir, tahsil 
ebli, of Saugor district. The inscriptions on the reverses 
read ‘‘Sri Mad 
very rudely struck figures of Lakshmi. But the peculiarity 
of the coins consisted in their fabric. The usual coins of Gan- 
geya Deva are thin and broad. These were thick, and in dia- 
meter only a bare half inch. The weight of the coins was nor- 
mal. 
I showed the coins to Dr. Venis, C.I.E., and Mr. R. Burn, 
C.S. The latter suggests that the coins may be a posthumous 
issue by Gangeya Deva’s son Karma, who was a great con- 
queror. 
Allahabad. H. Netson WRIGHT. 
102. Suamsu-p-pIN Maumip SHAH or DEHLI. 
In Numismatic Supplements XIV and XV, a reference to 
which is invited, I noted on a billon coin of Shamsu-d-din 
Mahmiid Shah of Dehli, an ephemeral Sultan whois only known 
by the existence of two coins bearing his name. I remarked 
“Ta 
ences to this Mahmied Shah. The first coin to be discovered is 
in the British Museum, but eluded my notice because it is not 
in the Catalogue of the coins of the Dehli Sultans. It is des- 
cribed in an Appendix to the British Museum Catalogue of 
