1887.] Dr. Hoernle— Reports on Coins. 217 



No. of Coins. 

 VI. Farukhsi'r (Muhammad). 



a > type, with name in top line, two varieties, 

 as in Marsden, Num. Orient., No. DCCC- 

 CVIII and DCCCCXII ... ... 23 



b, type, with name in middle line (not in 



Marsden), ... ... ... 15 



VII. Raf£u-d-darja't, lettered surface, 1131, mints : Patna, 



Jahangirnagar, ... ... ... 2 



VIII. Rafiu-d-daulah (Shah Jahdn II) lettered surfaces, 



date 1131, mint : 'Azimabad, ... ... 2 



IX. Muhammad Sha'h, two types, as in Marsden, Num, 

 Orient, Nos. DCCCCXVIII and DCCCCX- 

 XI, dates 1131 (two), 1133, mint 'Azimabad, 3 



Total ... 232 



All the coins are Rupees, except three which are half rupees (or 

 8 annas), viz. 1 of Shah Jahan I, and two of Farukhsir. There were 

 not two half rupees and one quarter-rupee, as stated on a slip of paper, 

 enclosed with the coins, but three half rupees, as shown by the weight. 



Report on thirteen old gold coins, forwarded by the Oifg. Deputy 

 Commissioner of Jabalpur, with his No. 3286, dated 24th August 1887. 



The coins are reported as having been found in the village of 

 Karan Bal, in the Jabalpur District. 



They are all of gold, and belong to Ga'ngeya Deva. the Kula- 

 churi Raja of Ohedi, who reigned from about A. D. 1020-1040, and was 

 a contemporary of Mahmud of Ghazni. They are described and figured 

 in General Cunningham's, Archaeological Survey Reports, Vol. X, p. 25 

 (plate X, fig. 1-4.) On the obverse is represented the goddess Durga 

 seated ; the reverse contains the legend : S'ri Madgdngeya Deva. 



Report on 112 old coins, forwarded by the Deputy Commissioner of 

 Gujrat, with his No. 434, dated 2 May 1887. 



The coins are said to have been found in the villages of Dillawal, 

 Dhul and Dhunu, of the Gujrat District. 



They are all of silver, and belong to two entirely different species 

 of coins ; viz., 81 are rupees of different Mughal emperors of Dehli, 

 while 31 are half -rupees of the Hindu kings of Kabul; total 112 coins. 

 The Kabul coins are the more ancient, and date from the 9th century 

 A. D. The Mughal coins range between 1627 and 1761 A. D. 



The 81 Mughal coins belong to the following emperors : 

 I, Shah Jahdn 1627-1658 A. D., indifferent 



specimens ; date and mint unknown, ... 2 



