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Jain, Rekha. Ancient Indian Coinage: A Systematic Study of Money Economy from Janapada Period to Ear

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Jain, Rekha. Ancient Indian Coinage: A Systematic Study of Money Economy from Janapada Period to Ear
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Jain, Rekha, Ancient Indian Coinage: A Systematic Study of Money Economy from Janapada Period to Early Medieval Period (600 BC to AD 1200), New Delhi, 1995, 260 pages, 8 plates, hardcover with dust jacket. Analyzing in depth an astonishing mass of numismatic and kindred data, published in different catalogues, archaeological reports, journals and elsewhere, this book investigates the evolution of ancient India's money economy, in terms of its coinage, through six successive periods: Janapada, Maurya, post-Maurya, Gupta, post-Gupta, and pre-medieval which, in their togetherness, span nearly two millennia. Covering the entire subcontinental sprawl, Dr. Jain considers the whole variety of coins: local, universal standard, and even foreign, with meticulous descriptions of coin types, symbols, legends, fabric and metrology. In her thematic effort to reconstruct the history of ancient Indian coinage (and, thus, money economy), from its first beginnings in high antiquity to about the twelth century ad, the author has drawn on wide-ranging primary and secondary sources. Jain has also tried to establish linkages between different ancient coins and their references/descriptions in Vedic/Buddhist/Jaina texts, Paninis Ashtadhyayi, Kautilyas Arthashastra, epical literature, Dharmashastras, foreigner's travelogues, old-world mathematical treatises, and numerous contemporary inscriptions, among other writings, ex. John Page Collection.