1901.] 
W. Theobald —Copper Coins of Ancient India. 
69 
■ 
• 
r 
■ • | 
• •• 
• • • 
. • . 
R. r 
23 
• • • 
... 
R. 
24 
... 
... 
0. 
25 
• • • 
• • • 
O. 
t * » 
• • • 
... 
0. 
• •• 
• • • 
0. 
26 
.M 
0. 
27 
_ 
0. 
28 
• • • 
... 
0. 
29 
• • • 
... 
0. 
30 
• ♦ • 
M. 
R. 
31 
• • • 
0. 
32 
91 
5 
0. 
33 
124 
4 
0. 
34 
... 
| 
0. 
35 
• • • 
0. 
36 
• • • 
• • • 
0. 
to the pose of the Elephant on the copper coins, as 
compared with the rude form the Elephants display 
on the silver ‘ Pnranas,’ which conventional forms 
entirely disappear on later mintages. 
?he same design is seen on Satrap coins of Mathura. 
A.I., VIII, fig. 4. 
L standing female figure between two trees, with 
railings, the trees forming a canopy overhead. 
This figure is probably intended for Queen Maya 
about to give birth to Buddha. T.P., XX, fig. 49. 
A lead coin. 
L seated female figure with the right hand on the 
hip though the text describes it as ‘ held up ’ 
(p. 116). A.I., XIII, fig. 2. 
laja seated with the right leg over the edge of the 
throne. A.I., XIII, fig. 3. 
laja seated with right hand on knee. A.I., XIII, 
fig. 14. 
Raja seated, with right hand holding a flower. 
A.I., XIII, fig. 15. These four coins are from 
Nepal. 
Standing male figure holding a standard in his right 
hand. J.B., VII, LXI, fig. 5. Ujain. 
Standing figure with arms akimbo. Ujain. (491). 
Standing figure (Siva) with three heads. Ujain. 
(493). J.B., VII, LXI, fig. 26. 
A seated figure wish arms akimbo. J.B., VII, LXI, 
fig. 18. Ujain. 
A standing male figure, counterstruck on Reverse. 
J.B., VII, LXI, fig. 13. Ujain. 
A male and female figure both standing side by side. 
(S). Ujain. B.M. 
A plumed warrior to right, holding a club in left 
hand and a water-pot in the right. (S). Ujain. 
These coins average 22 grains, and on two of them 
two fish in a tank, facing each other, seem to form 
part of the die. They are in the Cabinet of the 
Royal Asiatic Society. 
A plumed warrior to right with a club in right 
hand and a water-pot in the left. A.I., X, fig. 3. 
Ujain. 
The plumed warrior is a ‘punch* device and Ujain 
is one of the few mints which issued ‘ punch- 
marked* coins proper. The majority of Ujain 
coins are however die-struck, e.g ., all those figured 
on A.I., X, and the same may be said of Eran 
coins. A.I., XI. 
A plumed warrior to left, in an oval area. (S). The 
‘ torso ’ of the figure is pretty distinct, but the 
narrow compass of the die leaves no room for the 
club or water-pot as in the previous figures. All 
these coins have the Benares or ‘ cotton-bale ’ sym¬ 
bol on the reverse, and average 36 grains, on some 
80 coins. On one larger coin of 57 grains the 
figure is counterstruck over the figure of the Sun. 
Benares district. 
A human hand. J.B., VII, LXI, fig. 2. Ujain. 
A kneeling figure to left. J.B., VII, LXI, fig. 16. 
Ujain. 
J. i. 10 
