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TIRUPATI, INDIA, March 28, 2012 (Times of India): Members of a numismatic scholars’ committee, formed to segregate the huge collection of coins in the famous Tirupati Tirumala temple, have found that some of the earliest coins in the collection belonged to the Satavahana period, more than 2,000 years ago.

The panel, which included 20 numismatic scholars from the south, has segregated more than 36 tonnes of coins from the total 48 tonnes in three sessions.

“We have segregated about 36 tonnes of coins so far. The remaining 12 tonnes will be segregated in a couple of months,” said T Sathyamurthy, one of the members in the team and vice president of South Indian Numismatic Society.

Sathyamurthy said the gold coins accumulated in the hundi (temple collection box) are found to be embedded in the necklaces of the God. The temple administration has stored a huge amount of copper and lead coins in the nearby treasury. The temple is administered by the Tirupati Tirumalai Devasthanams.

The coins during the Nayak period cover the major share. Others include coins of Bahmani, Khilji, Chatrapathi Sivaji, Qutub Shahi, Mysore Wodayars, Travancore kings, East India Company and Dutch India Company, Sathyamurthy said, adding that modern coins from as many as 60 countries, including the Middle-East, Africa, US, UK, Australia, Canada, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines are also found in the collection.

“We are planning to display the rare coins in the two museums here. We are actually working on how to do it,” said J Vijayakumar, chief museum officer of the Sri Venkateswara Museum, Tirupati.