1922.1 History and Ethnology of North-Eastern India. 421 
pbs Ye wl-b_LwJ} 
wdly Lalo} Klose 
Bl Glad Khel! 5-4! 
(yb ad 
The first two lines are identical with the first two lines of 
the coins of Bahadur, and the whole fabric of the coin shows 
that it was almost certainly issued from Lakhnauti and that it 
was the work of Bahadur’s own mintmaster. The reverse, 
which supplies us with the actual name of Nasiruddin, viz.: 
Tbrahim, runs :— 
Bl ail yt bolt 0 
wlblec wt wlbldt 
been obtained, but from the fact that 
death took place in 725 A. H. the coin mus 
either in this, or the previous year.’ 
the very day that he returned from Bengal to Tugh- 
died by the fall of a tem- 
e had partaken of a feast of welcome, 
and 3 te Muhammad ibn Tughlaq. 
nd was succeeded by his son Mu sievite Bahkdut 
and send him back to Bengal to share that - 
with (apparently) his brother Nasiruddin Ibrahim 
sontemporary authority for t 
(except the evidence of cains tha 
tioned) is Ibn Batitah, who gives 
Bahadur and his subsequent fate.” 

anager sa 8 Pl, XVI, pub- 
1 A reproduction of this coin may be seen in No- 3, 
lished with Numismatic Supplament No. XVEof J.A:8.B. he 1911. Mr 
J. Allan states that it came from the Sonpat hoard, Punjab. 
2 Op. cit (Arabic text), pp. 316 and 317. 
