380 
Numismatic Supplement. 
[No. 4, 
Sikandarabad; 122. Siyalkot; 123. Sltpur (perhaps Peshawar); 126. 
Shikar al Gab?; 133. ‘Alamgirnagar; 146. Kalinjar; 170. Maughir; 
203. Hapur. 
It is desirable that the coins represented by the entries in this 
sub-list be submitted anew to a careful scrutiny, inasmuch as some five 
or six of the mint-names stand in need of verification. 
The following 40 mints are in Mr. Burn’s list but not in Dr. 
Codrington’s:— 
12. Islambandar; 13. Ismahlgarh or Isma‘ilgarh ; 21. Alwar (C) ; 
31. Ausa; 33. Balapur (C) ; 36. Baroda (0); 37. Burhanabad; 40. 
Bisauli; 41. Baldat-i-Safa; 42. Balwantnagar; 50. Bahadurgarh; 52. 
Bahraich; 54. Bharuch (0); 56. Bhopal (C) ; 64. Purbandar or Par- 
bandar; 65. Punch; 97. Khairnagar; 98. Dadar; 106. Devgarh ; 109. 
Ranthor or Ranthur; 110. Rohtas; 111. Zain al Bilad; 113. Sam- 
bhar; 114. Satganw (C) ; 118. Sambhal (C) ; 124. Sevpur; 149. 
Kararabad; 150. Krishnagarh; 156. Kiratpur; 170. Manghir; 173. 
Mujahidabad; 177. Madan Kot; 194. Nahan (C); 197. Najibgarh; 
198. Narwar (0); 199. Nasrullanagar; 201. Nurgal; 202. Walija- 
bad F; 204. Hathras; 205. Hansi Sahibabad. 
The nine mints beside which has been placed a bracketed (C) are 
indeed entered in Codrington’s List, but not as mints of the 
“ Dehli Emperor.” And it must be admitted that coins from several 
of these mints, though bearing the names of the later Emperors, were 
not struck under their authority. As Mr. Longwortli Dames has well 
said, “ They merely represent the desire of the Maratlja chiefs to take 
advantage of the prestige still attaching to the name of Badshah.” 
We thus arrive at a total of 206 mints, made up as follows:— 
In Codrington’s List and in Burn’s ... 143 mints. 
In Burn’s List alone ... ... ... 40 „ 
In Codrington’s List alone ... ... 23 „ 
Total ... 206 mints. 
Mention should here be made of four mints not registered in either 
of the two Lists. Mr. Nelson Wright’s cabinet contains— 
(a) from the Jalnapur mint a rupee of Jahangir, 
( b) „ ,, Mandisor ,, ,, Shah ‘Alam II, 
(c) „ „ Jalalnagar „ fulus of Akbar I; 
and Mr. Bleazby possesses a copper coin of Akbar II’s reign struck at 
Muzaffarnagar. These four additional mints raise the total from 206 to 
210. It is interesting to note that this Resultant Total is exactly 
