Vol. VIII, No. 10.] Numismatic Supplement No. XIX. 415 
N.S. 
Fort,’ and this, doubtless, is the real signification of Junagadh. 
The passage was easy from x98 &ya to 80S Ly= and vice versd. 
Indeed on one occasion Aurangzéb issued an imperial mandate 
that in place-names a final ‘he’ should be supplanted by an 
‘ alif.”} 
ow proceed to a detailed description of the Mughal 
coins ateaak at the mint of Jinagadh. 
I. Shah Jahan I: a.H. 1037-1069; a.p. 1628-1659. 
Silver: No. 1: (Fig. 1): 13—-1049; 14—1050. 
Obverse.—Area square with looped curves. 
alt yt iy” 
o— — DH 
&—DI Joy 
Margin lower: 5.1 Go 
53 left : yet Jor 4 
1 Upper: wlete 3b 
op > Tighe: ule ple ’ 
Hijri year in left margin. 
Reverse.—Area square with looped corners. 
cps 
why aloo 
Margin upper: cro! Gk* 
3 right: wele oo 
Margin lower: = 94 wl 
sy deft: + Bee wy? 
Regnal year in right margin. 
Silver: No. 2: (Fig. 2): 1050; 1052; 1054; 1057; 1059; 
1060; 1062; 1063; 1064 (L.M.C.); ee ue 7; 1069. 
Also an undated half-rupee (C. E. Kotwal) 
Obverse.—As on No. : 
Reverse.—As on No. 
but ony year is not recorded. 
II. Aurangzéb: a.#. 1068—1118; a.p. 1658—1707. 
» Gold: 2 X—XXEX Al. M.C. No. 1154). 
1 Ibid., vii, 344. 
