Kashmir Region, Kidarite / Hunnic dynasties, Sri Tujina I (c. 700 AD), Base Gold Dinara, 7.16g, Obv: Standing figure of Shiva facing left, nimbate, wearing Kushan like knee length coat, holding trident in left hand and making offerings at the altar with the right hand, 'Sri Tujina' in Brahmi to right of altar Rev: Goddess Parvati seated on a throne, holding a long stem lotus in left hand and holding another lotus in her right hand just above the shoulder, Brahmi legend Kidara in left field and Jaya in right the field. Extremely Rare. Sir Alexander Cunningham in his book Coins of Medieval India, 1894 had mis-attributed the coin to Toramana. With the discovery of a small group of coins found in Kashmir scholars have convincingly made the correct attribution to Tujina. On one hand Tujina's coins have a close resemblance to the Kashmir Toramana coins and on the other with that of the Kidara Kushanas who appear from the fifth century onwards as the successors of the later Great Kushanas in Gandhara and the regions east of the Indus.