COINS FROM MALACCA. 197 
13. Copper. Two Duits. " 
Dated 1790. About twice as He as No. 12, but other- 
wise similar to it. 
14, Copper. One Duit. 
} Obv. Coat-of-arms, consisting of a crowned shield con- 
taining two lions passant. 
Rev. af E792: 
Except for date similar to Netscher and Chijs, pl. IV, 
fie, 22°. 
(b). Coins of Java under French Rule (1807-1811.) 
1. Copper. One Duit. 
Oby. ‘JAVA, 1810’. Below this the letter ‘Z.’- 
Rev. A monogram of the two letters ‘L. N.’, standing for 
Louis Napoleon. 
See Netscher and Chijs, p. 112, No. 60; pl. VII, fg. 60°, 
2. Copper. Two Duits. 
Oby. ‘JAVA’. Date effaced. 
Rev. ‘L. N.’ 
(ce). Coins of Java under Dutch or British Rule ? 
The Malacca collection contains a copper coin, probably 
one Duit, of the following description : 
Obverse: Coat-of-arms consisting of a crowned shield: en- 
closing a liou rampant, with the figures ‘3’ and ‘,!,’ to the right 
and left of the shield respectively. 
Reverse: the legend INDL&# BATAY. 1816. 
In 1816 Java was handed back by the British to the Dutch, 
and as the coin bears a coat-of-arms used by the Dutch Kast 
India Company throughout the eighteenth century, there is no 
reasonable doubt that the coin is of Dutch, not British origin. 
Coins identical with it, except for the date, were issued by the 
Batavian Republic previous to the English occupation of Java, 
and by the Dutch Government after the English occupation, and 
the Raffles Museum contains such coins of the years 1802, 1818, 
1819, 1821 and 1824. But the Museum also contains a coin of 
1815, that is a coin struck in Batavia with the Dutch coat-of- 
arms during the time of the English rule. Therefore it is just 
R. A. Soc., No. 39, 1903. 
