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Contents |
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Index
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Introduction
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Contents
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List of Plates
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Additions and Corrections
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Images
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Contents |
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Altekar, A. S
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Bhattasali, N. K
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Barua, B. M And Chakravarti, Pulin Behari
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Chakravarti, S. N
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Chhabra, B. CH
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Das Gupta
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Desai, P. B
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Gai, G. S
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Garde, M. B
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Ghoshal, R. K
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Gupte, Y. R
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Kedar Nath Sastri
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Khare, G. H
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Krishnamacharlu, C. R
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Konow, Sten
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Lakshminarayan Rao, N
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Majumdar, R. C
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Master, Alfred
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Mirashi, V. V
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Mirashi, V. V., And Gupte, Y. R
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Narasimhaswami, H. K
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Nilakanta Sastri And Venkataramayya, M
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Panchamukhi, R. S
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Pandeya, L. P
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Raghavan, V
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Ramadas, G
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Sircar, Dines Chandra
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Somasekhara Sarma
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Subrahmanya Aiyar
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Vats, Madho Sarup
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Venkataramayya, M
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Venkatasubba Ayyar
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Vaidyanathan, K. S
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Vogel, J. Ph
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Index.- By M. Venkataramayya
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Other
South-Indian Inscriptions
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Volume
1
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Volume
2
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Volume
3
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Vol.
4 - 8
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Volume 9
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Volume 10
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Volume 11
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Volume 12
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Volume 13
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Volume
14
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Volume 15
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Volume 16
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Volume 17
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Volume 18
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Volume
19
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Volume
20
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Volume 22 Part 1
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Volume
22 Part 2
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Volume
23
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Volume
24 |
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Volume
26
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Volume 27 |
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Tiruvarur
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Darasuram
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Konerirajapuram
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Tanjavur |
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Annual Reports 1935-1944
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Annual Reports 1945- 1947
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Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Volume 2, Part 2
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Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Volume 7, Part 3
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Kalachuri-Chedi Era Part 1
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Kalachuri-Chedi Era Part 2
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Epigraphica Indica
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 3
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 4
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 6
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 7
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 8
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 27
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 29
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 30
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 31
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Epigraphia Indica Volume 32
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Paramaras Volume 7, Part 2
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Śilāhāras Volume 6, Part 2
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Vākāṭakas Volume 5
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Early Gupta Inscriptions
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Archaeological
Links
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Archaeological-Survey
of India
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Pudukkottai
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EPIGRAPHIA INDICA
RAO BAHADUR K. N. DIKSHIT.
Rao Bahadur K. N. Dikshit, M. A., F. R. A. S. B., the late Director General of Archaeology in
India, passed away at Poona on the 12th of August 1946. He was a profound Sanskrit scholar
and a versatile archaeologist conversant with many a branch of archaeology including epigraphy
and numismatics.
Born at Pandharpur in the Sholapur District of the Bombay State on the 21st October 1889,
the late Rao Bahadur had a distinguished educational career from his High School days. He won
laurels in the B. A. and M. A. examinations of the Bombay University in the years 1909 and 1911
respectively. Entertained as a scholar by the Archaeological Department in 1912, he received
training in field archaeology under Sir John Marshall and later worked under the later Dr. D. R.
Bhandarkar and Dr. D. B. Spooner. He worked for some time as Assistant Curator, Prince
of Wales Museum, Bombay, and as Curator, Provincial Museum, Lucknow. In 1918 the late
Rao Bahadur started his official career as Superintendent in the Archaeological Survey of India
and held the office for many years in the Eastern and Western Circles. He took a leading part
in the excavations of Mohenjo-Daro during 1923-25. Subsequently he conducted the excavations at various sites, viz., Paharpur in Northern Bengal, Ramnagar in Uttar Pradesh, etc. He
was appointed as one of the Deputy Directors General of Archaeology in 1930 and worked as
Government Epigraphist for India for some time in 1932. In 1933 he went abroad and enriched
his knowledge by direct contact with renowned archaeologists and institutions in the Western
countries. He was appointed Director General of archaeology in India in 1937 and held
that post till his retirement in 1944. The late Rao Bahadur was President of the Indian History
Congress, Sixth Session, in 1943, and President of the Numismatic Society of India in 1938, 1939
and 1946.
A large number of learned contributions on archaeological and other subjects made to the
Departmental publications and other journals stand to his credit. Besides the Annual Reports
of the circles under his charge and of the Archaeological Survey of India after he became its head,
two monographs (Mem. A.S.I., Nos. 8 and 55), one dealing with six sculptures from Mahoba and
another on the excavations at Paharpur were written by him. The late Rao Bahadur delivered a
series of lectures on the prehistoric civilization of the Indus Valley in the Sir William Meyer
Lectures Series at the Madras University in 1935. By his death India has lost a great archeologist and scholar. He edited parts of Volume XXI of this journal. The following is a list of his
contributions to the pages of the Epigraphia Indica :─
1. Sangoli Plates of Harivarman : the 8th year (Vol. XIV).
2. Poona Plates of the Vākāṭaka queen Prabhāvatī-Guptā : the 13th year (Vol. XV).
3. Garra Plates of the Chandella Trailokyavarman : [Vikrama]-Samvat 1261 (Vol. XVI).
4. A Note on the dates of the Gupta copper-plates from Damodarpur (Vol. XVII).
5. A Note on the Vākāṭaka Inscription from Ganj (Vol. XVII).
6. Inscriptions on a Vishṇu image from Deopāṇi (Vol. XVIII).
7. Two Harsola copper-plate grants of the Paramāra Sīyaka of V. S. 1005 (Vol. XIX).
8. Paharpur copper-plate grant of the [Gupta] Year 159 (Vol. XX).
9. Navagrāma grant of the Mahārāja Hastin ; G. E. [1]98 (Vol. XXI).
10. The Palanpur Plates of Chaulukya Bhīmadēva ; V. S. 1120 (Vol. XXI).
11. A Note on the Bhor State Museum copper-plate of Khambha II (Vol. XXIII).
12. Three copper-plate inscriptions from Gaonri (Ibid.).
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