106 
Numismatic Supplement. 
[Extra No. 
the Tank! was the same as on the Tanka, the component words, however, 
being differently arranged. Thus:— 
I. (a) Obv. 
Rev. 
^ 
, 4—4 
Two specimens of a Yak Tanki (not Tanki) are known, one in Mr. 
Wright’s cabinet and the other in my own. These exhibit on the 
reverse a still further variation in the arrangement of the words. 
Thus (fig 9.)— 
I. (b) Obv. jM&j *’I 
Rev. 
jit 
The year of issue is probably 49, but on both the specimens the 
figures are almost entirely obliterated. 
In my collection are also two specimens of “ mules, each dated 
Ilahi 44, Amardad, and bearing on both faces a legend identical with the 
normal reverse of a Tanka. 
Obv. and Rev. 
Thus:— 
<4 uj”^®t 
The weight of one is 634 grains, and of the other 317, whence we 
may infer that they are in fact a large Tanka and small Tanka spoiled 
by some misadventure in the process of minting. 
The following list registers all the dated Akbari coins of Ahmada- 
bad known to me. It also includes those coins of the rarer denomina¬ 
tions whose dates are wholly or partially illegible. 
N.B .—In this list the expression, say 45 (2, 3, 4, 7) indicates coins of the 
2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 7th mouths of the Ilahi year 45, that is to say, coins dated 
Ardibihisht, Khurdad, Tir, and Mihr of Ilahi 45 : and a like meaning, mutatis 
mutcmdis, attaches to all the other expressions having the same form. Thus xx (x) 
denotes a coin of an unknown month of an unknown (Ilahi) year. 
Type I 
A. Fulus. 
Whole Fulus 
H. 980; 981 (Cal.); 98 x (Br. Mus.). 
Half Fulus 
H. 981 (Wright). 
Quarter Fulus 
• 
