61 
1883.] C. J. Rodgers —Coins Supplementary of the Pathan Kings. 
weighs but 45T grs. It is of the same type as a coin of Chingiz Khan 
given by Thomas, No. 76, p. 91. As I had a specimen of both these sover¬ 
eign’s coins of this type I made them over to the British Museum. 
No. 11 another new type of the same king’s. 
No. 12. In copper a beautiful specimen of the Farwan mintage of 
the same sovereign. 
No. 13. Another old specimen of the same king’s coins. The Sikan- 
dar under the bull is quite a novelt} r . 
No. 14 is still one more novelty with the patronymic Talcash on it. 
No. 15 is again a similar type differently treated. 
Plate Y, No 16 is a second copy of a coin I have before edited. No. 10, 
pi. XVIII, Vol. XLIX, Pt. I, 1881. That coin had on the top of the 
obverse certain signs I could not make out. On the present coin they are 
plain enough. 
No. 17 is also a Dehli coin of very small dimensions. I have several 
of these which I attribute to Shams-ud-din Altainsh. 
No. 18. I am not quite sure of my readings of this coin. “ Ayr ah" 
is certain. But the name of the coin is not so certain. 
No 19 is important as giving us certain information about the king 
of whom there are but sparse notices in history. This shows him once in 
possession of Gazni, 
*No. 20 is the only small silver coin I have ever seen or heard of, 
of the early Pathans. It is rarer than Queen Ann’s farthings and much 
older. 
No. 21 is a silver gilt coin of ’Ala-ud-din Khwarizmi. It is the only 
one of this type I have ever seen. 
No. 23 is also a coin of this sovereign. In this paper alone I give 
ten. These are all perfectly different from each other in treatment. 
No. 22 is the earliest gold coin struck at Dehli that I know of. Pos¬ 
sessing as it does the margin on the reverse in its entirety it is a fine coin. 
The margins were the same on both sides. 
Nos. 24 and 25 are coins I attribute to Malih Chhaju in the reign 
of Jalal-ud-din Firfiz Shah. He was the nephew of Balkan. To com¬ 
plete the numismatic record of the interregnum between the reigns of 
Mu’izz-ud-din Kaikubad and Jalal-ud-din we wanted not only this coin 
but of Kaiumours whom Jalal-ud-din placed temporarily on the throne. 
Mr. Delmerick had this coin I believe. If not, it is still with Pandit 
Narain of Dehli. Chhaju was a rebel but it is distinctly recorded of him 
that he struck coins in his own name. 
* Since drawing the above I have seen in Mr. Grant’s cabinet a similar coin of 
Nasir-ud-din Mahmud. It weighs 13 2 grs. Mine is 13'8 grs. being in somewhat 
better condition. 
