Vol. VI, No. 10.] Numismatic Supplement 



573 



[N.8.] 



Muhammad Shah. 



Two noteworthy coins of Muhammad Shah were from the 

 Ausa and Sironj mints (Figs. 14, 15, Rev. only). Unfortu- 

 nately neither of the two shows the Hijri year, but on the 



is 12, and on the Sironj 4 (or 

 reign were two Maohhllpattan 



regnal 



year 

 this 



Ausa rupee the 

 possibly #4). Also of 



rupees, dated 2— 11 32 and 8—1139, of the type already des- 

 cribed in Numismatic Supplement VIII, 592, and XII, 383. 



The Plate illustrating this article exhibits the following 

 rupees 



Jinjl: 41—1109: Obv. and Rev. 

 Mahmudban[dar] : 51 — -1119: Rev. 

 [Mahmjudbandar : 51 — 1119: Rev. 

 Mint unknown : 30 — 1098 : Rev. 

 Mint unknown : 4# — 1109 : Rev. 

 Mahllapur : R. Y. 4tx\ Rev. 

 Mailapur : 5x — 1118 : Rev. 



No. 1. Aurangzeb 



„ 2. 



4. 

 5. 



6. 



7. 



8. Jahandar 



5 9 



5 J 



9 9 



'? 



9 9 



99 



> J 



99 



J> 



99 



9 9 



+ 9 



> r 



9 9 



9 9 



>? 



9. 



> j 



10. Farrukh-siyar 



11. 

 12. 

 13. 



14. Muhammad Shah : Ausa: R. Y. 12: Rev. 



15. : Sironj: R. Y. 4: Rev. 



5 9 



9 » 



3 J 



Bahadurgarh : 1 — 1124: Obv. and 



Rev. 

 Bahadurgarh : R. Y. 1 : Obv. and 



Rev. 

 ? Gulshanabad : R. Y. 2 : Obv. and 



Rev- 

 Azamnagar : No date : Rev. 

 Mint unknown : R. Y. 4 : Rev. 

 Bankapur: 7 — 1130: Obv. and Rev. 



99 



Ahmadabad : 

 9th May, 1910 



Geo. P. Taylor. 



85. A Postscript to the Article 



< i 



on fc * Some Coins from 

 Limbdi Treasury-." 



Note 



Mahmud 



mandel Coast? Only yesterday I had 



in BomhaV tf\ Tk\nh- 11 r% a nrmrr n£ fVi« 



the good fortune here 



Bombay to pick up a copy of that rare book Alexander 



Hamilton's "New Account of the East Indies" (1727), and 



turning over its pages I lit upon the following relevant pas- 

 sage; 



11 The next Place of Commerce is Porto Novo, so called 

 by the Portugueze, when the Sea-coasts of India 

 belonged to them ; but when Aurangzeb subdued 

 Golcondah, and the Portugueze affairs declined, the 

 Mogul set a Fouzdaar in it, and gave it the Name 

 of Mahomet Bander. The Europeans generally call 



