1899.] Section I. — Goins and Seals. 29 
(5) Harsa, c. 1062-1072 A.D., two coins, copper. As in ibid., 
pi. xii, No. 15. 
(b) Brahman Kings of Kabul. 
Samanta Deva, about 926-940 A.D.; 2 coins, silver; of the so- 
called “ Bull and Horseman ” type, as in Prinsep’s Indian Antiquities 
(ed. Thomas), Yol. I, Plate XXV, 3, 4, 5; weight 46 and 44 grs.; size 
0 7 and 0625". From G. 4. 
VII. Medieval Muhammadan Coins. 
(c. 800-1585 A.D.). 
The total of these coins is 127. Many of them, as will he noticed 
under the several coins, belong to G. 4, and were obtained in Western 
Turkestan. Of the others, belonging to M. 2, M. 6, many were found 
in the Takla Makan desert; but it is probable that the more modern 
ones were procured in Khotan itself and its bazars. 
These coins belong to very different classes and ages. In the 
following list they are arranged in chronological order. 
(a) ‘ Abbasi Khalifahs. 
Ar-Rashid; 1 coin, silver, like British Museum Catalogue, Vol. I, 
Plate V, No. 224 (p. 83); with a loop for suspension; mint Madina- 
tu-l-Islam, date 192 H. ( = 807 A.D.) : weight 47*5 grs., size 0*83". 
Belongs to G. 4. 
(b) Khans of TurJcistdn. 
(1) Yilik Khan; 3 coins, silver, like Br. Mus. Cat., Vol. II, Plate V, 
No. 433 (p. 121); two of mint Samarqand, 41 dates 397 and 39[8] H, 
(=1006 and 1007 A.D.), weight 35*5 and 42 grs., size 0 9375" and 
1*03125"; one of mint Sarraqustah, date 394 H. (= 1003 A.D.) weight 
38 grs., size 0*9375", see Plate T, fig. 21. The latter as well as one of 
the Samarqand coins have on the reverse area <*!( above and Jtgj below 
the central legend, but nothing corresponding on the obverse, while 
the other Samarqand coin has All and on the reverse and or>B 
on the obverse. From M. 2. 
Yilik Khan, a chief of the Uighurs, is also known as Satuq Bughra 
Khan. He lived from 333-429 H. (=944-1037 A.D.), to the age of 
96 years. He was the founder of a very extensive, but short-lived 
empire of the Uighurs, with a capital at Kash gh ar. See Dr. Bellew 
in Sir T. D. Forsyth’s Report of a Mission to Yarkand in 1873 , pp. 125, 
*1 On one of them apparently spelled Samarkand. 
