16 E. E. Oliver— The Coins of the Chaghatdi Mughals. [No. 1,1891.] 
name is generally written Bayan Seldiiz eA*, spelled “ Biaun 
Suldoze” in White’s Institutes of Timur. He seems to have governed in 
a way, though a dissipated hard-drinking Amir, and to have been put to 
death by Tughlaq Timur Khan (ruling in Eastern Turkistan) circa 764 
H. It seems possible that the two following coins may be his. 
No. 30. JR. 1 25; 121 grains. Madinatn-l-rijal Tarmaz, 764 H. My 
cabinet. 
| JL^)| | aCw | | 
Ditto. ? Bukhara. 7xx H. Mr. L. White King. 
@ L>... I f*! I j 40-o~Of | J^... 
Doubtful coins. 
Al. 9. (? Dua.) Badakhshan. 69(4) H. Count Stronganoff. 
&JJ t J M)| J ( * 3 ) SJ ^ ^ l 
<Xj ^ 
No. 31. JR. 1'2; 120 grains. Mahmu[dabad], x27 H. Mr. Rodgers. 
.¥| ... l - rv Ji | [4J.£]_sO<gKt>- I [>jU*] 
No. 32. JR 1'2; 124 grams. Samrqand, 753 H. Mr. L. W. King. 
v«r | *¥* | [<Df^ ac!j] | 
Ditto. Without mint, 754 H. Ditto. 
In these two coins and in some others, Buyan Quli calls himself 
Nasiru-d-din. 
KATLAGH KHWAJA, the son of Dua, who with his father invaded 
India, and appears to have been at Jalandhar 696, as far as Delhi 
697-8, and Lahore 701 H. (See Zia-ud-din Barni, and D’Ohsson’s 
account.) His copper coins, like the two following, are not uncommon in 
India. 
No. 33. JR. '6; 53 grains. 
.. .-*» | .. *5P I .. • y 
No. 34. JR. ‘6 ; 52 grains. 
¥ | 
