224. C. J. Rodgers— Rare Kashmir Coins. [No. 2, 
(8) sith yore creas} AS couxil fall. 
(9) wlblad} do. 
AV}E (874 ff.) Ave (874 H.) 
(10) 88 Gyno ye 
wlblLidS} 
(11) eerie as, 
oo 5 sine 
ala ols qi (971 H., in words 
ays and figures.) 
ESvs 
(12) 18 gi ax 
(13) “=* wlbldt 
wibhS} Wy 
(14) oo” abe} my 
ej Sila persinS (Kashmir 
et Fae 994 H.) 
These coins call for but few remarks. The letters under some 
show their ownership when they were drawn. S.=Mrs. Stoker, 
G.=General Gosset, o.p., K.=L. White King, Esq., F.s.4.; R.= Rodgers. 
It will be seen that Nos. 1, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12 and 13 are halves of such 
coins as Nos. 3 and 11. Hach king seems to have had a style of his 
own on these halves. These halves are seldom met with. There are 
none of them in the British Museum Catalogue, but in the Lahore 
Catalogue of my collection are several. 
No. 3 is a copper coin of Islam Shah Siri. This is the second 
one I have seen. He was never king in Kashmir, as I have shown in 
my paper on the square silver coins of the Sultans of Kashmir. His 
coins are evidence of the conspiracy against the then ruler of Kashmir, 
Mirza Haidar Doghlat, the author of the Tarikh-i-Rashidi. 
No. 4, is a coin of Yasaskara. In my paper on the “ Copper Coins 
of the Maharajas of Kashmir” I gave a coin on which the name is spelt 
Yaskara yt@<. Both coins are exceedingly rare. 
No. 5 is, I am inclined to think, a coin of Gulhana. I obtained 
