The title *Rajarajna* — "king of kings" — appears on a small group of silver drachms attributed to the northwestern Indian subcontinent during the second century BC, a period when Indo-Greek dynastic authority was fragmenting and local rulers were asserting independence through coinage. The issuing authority behind the Mahadeva epithet remains unresolved; no dynasty has been conclusively tied to this name, and the attribution to an "uncertain mint" reflects genuine scholarly disagreement rather than incomplete cataloguing.
The ACR reference places this among a loose cluster of issues that complicate the standard Indo-Greek sequence established by Bopearachchi.
The title *Rajarajna* — "king of kings" — appears on a small group of silver drachms attributed to the northwestern Indian subcontinent during the second century BC, a period when Indo-Greek dynastic authority was fragmenting and local rulers were asserting independence through coinage. The issuing authority behind the Mahadeva epithet remains unresolved; no dynasty has been conclusively tied to this name, and the attribution to an "uncertain mint" reflects genuine scholarly disagreement rather than incomplete cataloguing.
The ACR reference places this among a loose cluster of issues that complicate the standard Indo-Greek sequence established by Bopearachchi.