DESCRIPTION OF SELECT COINS. 587 



pieces, or the Vardha incarnation : two of them have the 

 letter <£ reversed. 



Reverse. — Emblems of unknown import. 



A number of these Coins belong to the Society, and several are in 

 Mr. Prinsep's possession : they have been found in various places, some 

 along with the preceding, indicative of their being current at a similar 

 period. 



Plate III. Figures 63 and 64. 

 Silver Coins. 



Obverse. — An imperfect inscription, of which the letter 

 ^ alone appears on the first : on the second it is preceded by 

 a 3, and is compounded with another letter, either T! or ^ : 

 part of the letter ^;, the initial of ^3T, perhaps follows, or it 

 may be supposed to represent ^Nz", a name of Vishnu in the 

 south of India, and thence borne by many princes, especi- 

 ally the Rajas of Vijayanagar. 



Reverse. — Indistinct marks. 



These Coins are also not uncommon, but they are of rude execution, 

 and much worn : they are probably of the same period as the preceding, 

 in company with which they have been occasionally dug up. 



Plate III. Figure 65. 



A Silver Coin. 



One of two dug up at Kotah, and in Mr. Prinsep's possession : the 

 marks upon them are too indistinct to admit of any conjecture as to what 

 they represent. 



