444 Continuation of Remarks on [Sept. 



as stops to denote the termination of the inscription, to which purpose 

 they would be applied in the Zend, or Pehlevi ; nor can the interven- 

 ing word be an epithet, coupled with neyas, for the same word occurs 

 on the gold medalfound by Dr. Martin*, with the simpler form BACiAeVC 

 oohmo kaa*ichc- The only probable conjecture is this, that Ookmo 

 or bhemo may be a part or an adjunct of the name of the prince. 



Quitting this dubious ground, and descending to the inferior coins 

 of thebull type, we findlegends 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15, expressing more 

 or less legibly the same term pao nano observed on the Kanerkou 

 group. 



In the same manner, fifteen of the elephant coins afford, some entire, 

 and some in part, the legend pao nano PAO in place of the title, and 

 some few, as that depicted in the figure 31, of Plate XXV. have the 

 word K6NPANO, which until contradicted by more satisfactory testimony 

 we may assume to be the prince's name on this coin. In some coins 

 this name seems written K6NOPANO- 



The two copper coins having seated figures, 29 and 32, of the Ma- 

 nikyala Plate, XXII ; also 32 of Plate XXV., and 3 of Plate XXVI. ; 

 have, though in fewer examples, furnished unequivocal fragments of the 

 same legend or title, pao nano 



The coin with the running figure, on the contrary, has only (in the 

 three legible samples of our collection) yielded portions of pao Ka . . . . 

 NHPKi, and is therefore in all respects similar to the secondary form of 

 the Kanerkou medals. The above includes all of the Indo-Scythic type 

 yet known : Mr. Masson restricts them to four distinct sets (page 

 174), and in fact so judicious had been his survey of the group, that we 

 have not been able to add one new type to his list. 



We now turn to the two gold coins of the Manikyala cabinet, having, 

 from the above cursory survey of the more numerous copper coins, be- 

 come possessed as it were of a key to their solution. 



It was some little time before I discovered that the inscriptions on 

 the larger gold coin of the first Manikyala deposit, (Plate XXI. fig. 2,) 

 and the little gold coin of the lower cylinder (Plate XXII. fig. 24,) bore 

 precisely the same legend on the obverse. The first half of the writ- 

 ing on the small coin was not legible ; and it was only after perceiving 

 the analogy of the latter half, with the second part of the larger coin, 

 that I was led by careful examination, to trace and recognize the rudi- 

 ments of each letter of the first part of the obliterated coin. I have 

 in the present Plate, XXV., placed the two in juxtaposition, (figs. 25 

 and 26,) to shew their identity, and the whole line thus restored be- 

 comes very evidently 



* See the drawing of this coin, by Masson, in Plate XIII. 



