Summary: offering a flower in the right hand. Signs of the zodiac arranged round the field. Legend: Chandra Pmahrakprisa ‘the moon, protector of the world.’ Reverse :-Female figure standing. Scarce. Assistant to James Prinsep in the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Letter from antiquary Horace Hayman Wilson. Preface indicates that the initial design of republishing Prinsep's Numismatic Essays has been broadened to include Archaeological and Paleographical studies due to the scarcity of demand. Contents lists essays including Roman, Greek, Parthian, Bactrian coins with additions to the Guptas and Kushans that have been discovered in various regions and they come from a newly discovered royal dynasty in the Panjab. Consistency in the transliteration of Oriental words is more flexible, while terms sanctioned by custom are preserved in English form. New series of coins include the ‘Ardokro’ type with detailed descriptions and identifications to explore royal dynasties of lesser known regions in India. The Mithraic inscriptions on these coins and figural representations offer a unique aspect to the study of the coinage.