138 
Dr. Hoernle — Rare Hindu and Muhammadan Coins. [No. 3, 
on both sides, and omits the words at-Td l iyu li-l-ldhi altogether. This is 
also very rare. I know only of the existence of one specimen ; it is in 
the Lahore Museum, No. 11 (p. 24) of the second volume of the Museum 
catalogue. In the Bannu find there were 13 specimens. 
The British Museum, so far as I can discover, possesses no speci¬ 
mens of either of the two rare varieties. One of each has now been 
given to it. The coin cabinets of the Asiatic Society of Bengal and of 
Bombay, and]of the Museums in Madras, Lahore, Lucknow and Nagpur 
have also been supplied with one specimen of each variety. 
So far as I know, no facsimile of either of the two rarer varieties 
has ever been published. Accordingly I do so now. Plate VI, No. 4 
shows the second variety. 
Ohv. 
Rev. 
In circular area :— • 
In circular area:— 
• © • 
• al) • 
Si *JJi S 
»X*sr >0 
Ltf ^ y «tl)| 
aJ y 
&U 
J ° 
Plate VI, No. 5 shows the third variety 
• -- 
• 
Ohv. 
Rev. 
In circular area :— 
In circular area : — 
• © • 
• *1) • 
Si a)| S 
aJJ| 
al SI 
a ^ o 
The margins on all the specimens of the find are almost entirely 
clipped away, and do not offer sufficient traces to identify any mint or 
date. 
V. Early Indo-Scythian Coin (Kadphises II). 
In the Proceedings for May, 1895, I published a notice of two coins 
of Kadphises II, with new Kharosthi legends on the reverse, They be¬ 
longed to a hoard of 432 coins of Kadphises II and Kanishka, which 
was found on the Kalka-Kasauli road in the Patiala State. With the 
exception of those two, all the coins belonged to the ordinary, well- 
