India, Ghurid Dynasty, Mu'izz ud-Din Muhammad bin Sam, Delhi mint, 1163-1206 AD., Jital, SU-0279.
India, Ghurid Dynasty, Mu'izz ud-Din Muhammad bin Sam (1163-1206)(?), Delhi mint(?), ca. 1163-1206 AD.(?),
Jital (15-16 mm / 3,01 g), billon,
Obv.: ... , recumbent bull facing right, above around: [Sri Mahmad Sam]. Crescent on bull's rump.
Rev.: ... , horseman facing right. above: [Sri Hamirah].
Goron, S. and Goenka, J.P., The Coins of the Indian Sultanates, SU-0279 ; D10 . cf The Fitzwilliam Museum Reference Number: 90823 .
http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/opac/search/cataloguedetail.html?&priref=90823&_function_=xslt&_limit_=50
The Ghurids or Ghorids (Persian: سلسله غوریان; self-designation: ShansabÄnÄ«) were a medieval Muslim dynasty of Iranian origin that ruled during the 12th and 13th centuries in Khorasan. At its zenith, their empire, centred at GhÅr (now a province in Afghanistan), stretched over an area that included the whole of modern Afghanistan, the eastern parts of Iran and the northern section of the Indian subcontinent, as far as Delhi. The Ghurids were succeeded in Persia by the KhwÄrazm-ShÄh dynasty and in North India by the Mamluk dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate.