Type A are minted of silver and look like authentic coins. They have readable inscriptions. Saratov State University scholar
Iosif Cherapkin, expert in
Moksha language, had examined type A coins and confirmed their authenticity. Inscription resembled Cyrillic without
soft signs and was readable in Old (Middle) Moksha and says 'It circulates as 1/2 of gold'.
Cherapkin's Inscription {{fs interlinear |indent=2 Cherapkin's inscription on the coins as had been attested is written in Old or precisely
Middle Moksha in Greek
uncial script with
digamma 'ͷ' or an unknown variant of
Cyrillic without
soft signs. Three of the four word forms are older that those attested in
Nicolaes Witsen's Dutch-Moksha dictionary issued in
1692 The word is attested in
Old Khanty language пелки (pelki) 'half' in a given name which is nowadays considered archaic and the word consequently is obsolete. The contemporary
Khanty term is "пелəк (pelək)"
half. Another inscription on a
mordovka was in
Old Erzya in the same script with the similar meaning.
Triangle Moksha coins Zavariukhin describes as well 22x23 mm size triangle form silver coins with obverse featured a woman's bust. Those coins first were described by Vladimir Aunovsky in
1869, he reports they are used in traditional
Moksha woman's headdress decoration and they say that was their queen depiction, meaning princess
Narchat.
Bracteates Evgeny Arsiukhin describes his collection from
Chuvashia and divides his corpus into complex 1 and complex 2. Complex 1 is a 2001 hidden treasure assemblage found in
Chuvashia includes
mordovkas and
Ruthenian coins. Complex 2 is a collection of coins from old
Chuvashian used before as a decoration. Complex 1 with Ф-tamga include a
bracteate with "Cyrillic inscription in 18th century manner". Spassky previously pointed out at huge amount of false coins in
Muscovy mint but this type bracteate seems to be formed much earlier, between 1547 and 1565. == See also ==