Vol. VI, No. 11.] Numismatic Supplement. 663 



[N.S.-] 



it is stated that « Sambha Ji hid in Kab Kalish's house and 

 was caught there. The capture was reported to Aurangzeb at 

 Akloj (renamed Sa'dnagar).' Akloj, or Aklaj , is a town some 

 55 miles to the N.-W. of Shola/niTr 



No. 29. M. Weight, 210 ; size, -8. 



Mint, Akbarabad. 

 Date, — A.H. : 3 R. 



Obverse. Reverse. 



±. 





#c 



V^ 



I read this as a copper coin of Farrukh Siyar struck at 

 Akbarabad in regnal year three. It was found at Dehli in the 

 same lot as coins Nos. 4, 5 and 25 of this paper, and copper 

 coins of Salimabad and Salimabad- Ajmir published previously. 



The mint name on the reverse is very similar in style to 

 that of coin No. 8, described and illustrated in Mr. C. J. 

 Rodgers' paper < Rare Mughal Coins ' (Journal A.S.B. for 1896), 

 as a coin probably struck by Shah Jahan at Agra or Akbar- 

 abad. This common peculiarity makes it quite possible that 

 that coin was one of Shah Jahan II. It was described as 



unique. 



Rafi'it-d-darjat 



No. 30. AT. Weight, 170; size, 1 



Mint, Akbarabad. 

 Date, 1131 A.H. ; 1 R. 



Obverse. Reverse. 



In double circle containing In double circle containing 



one of dots one of dots 



e,U ; <xlf gjj | tr i dM^I **&±lH yd** 



^Ijl^ftb jj^j ^j ^x^, ijBjha OV^Jjx: <j*^L> 



**J «u** 



This is a gold coin of Akbarabad. It differs from other 

 couplet coins of Rafi'u-d-darja-t that I have seen in being a 

 large, flat coin easily containing the entire legends and the 



om 



