Annual Report. 



[February, 1910. 



Gold 



Kedara 



Kumara Pala Deva of Qanauj 



Ganga Dynasty of Kalinga 



Vijayanagar 



Yadavas of Devagiri 



Silver 



Arakan 



Gujarat Dynasty 



Mughal 



Sikh 



Native State . 



East India Company 



Copper 



Malwa Dynasty 

 Ancient North Indian 



1 

 1 

 1 

 3 

 3 



1 

 5 



9 

 1 

 6 



1 



28 

 3 



Five of the gold and 16 of the above silver coins were 

 received from the Royal Asiatic Society, Bombay ; one gold 

 and 28 copper coins from the Central Provinces Government ; 

 one gold and seven silver coins from the Punjab Government, 

 one gold coin from the United Provinces Government, one 

 gold coin from the Mysore State, one silver coin from the 

 Burma Government, and three copper coins from Lt.-Col. 



Godfrey, CJ.E. 



The Numismatic Secretary examined and reported on 

 fifteen cases of treasure trove comprising six gold, 641 silver, 252 

 bullion and 248 copper coins, or 1147 coins in all. Notices of the 

 rarer coins discovered in the course of these examinations are 

 to be found in the pages of the Numismatic Supplement. 



Two issues of the Numismatic Supplement have appeared 

 during the year under report, containing notes of considerable 

 interest to Indian Numismatists. The contributors to the 

 Numismatic Supplement were the Rev. Dr. G. P. Taylor, 

 Lt.-Col. Vost, and Messrs. W. Irvine, H. Beveridge, R. Burn. 

 R. B. Whitehead, Framji Jamas jee Thanawala, and H. Nelson 

 Wright. 



Report on the Search for Sanskrit Manuscripts. 



During the year 1909, Mahamahopadhyaya Harapra- 

 sada Sastrl had charge of the operations in search of Sanskrit 

 Manuscripts; and he made several trips to Benares for the 

 acquisition of Sanskrit Manuscripts, his retirement giving him 

 leisure to devote to this business. The success of his endeavour 



