Contents |
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 |
Chaudhury, P.D.
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Chhabra, B.ch.
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DE, S. C.
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Desai, P. B.
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Dikshit, M. G.
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Krishnan, K. G.
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Desai, P. B
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Krishna Rao, B. V.
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Lakshminarayan Rao, N., M.A.
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Mirashi, V. V.
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Narasimhaswami, H. K.
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Pandeya, L. P.,
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Sircar, D. C.
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Venkataramayya, M., M.A.,
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Venkataramanayya, N., M.A.
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Index-By A. N. Lahiri
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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 |
Volume
26
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Volume 27 |
Tiruvarur
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Darasuram
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Konerirajapuram
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Tanjavur |
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
resemblance between the forms of the two letters.[1] The Parbatiyā plates under discussion
read the name of the capital city of the second line of Prāgjyōtisha kings (i. e., the house of
Sālastambha) unmistakably as Haḍapēśvara which was apparently also the reading of the lost
plates. This seems to suggest that the readings intended in the records of Harjaravarman and
Balavarman were Haṭappēśvara and Haḍappēśvara respectively.
The inscription mentions a number of geographical names including those of a river and a
hill. The adoration to the river-god Lōhitya-sindhu (cf. Lōhitya-bhaṭṭāraka also in the Tezpur
plates), i.e., the Brahmaputra, is very interesting. The same river is also adored as Lauhitya-vāridhi, Lauhitya-sindhu and Lauhitya ity=adhipatiḥ saritām in the records respectively of Balavarman who was the grandson of Vanamālavarman, of Ratnapāla who was the son of Brahmapāla
founder of the Pāla dynasty (the third line of Prāgjyōtisha kings), and of Indrapāla who was the
grandson of Ratnapāla.[2] The kings apparently held the river-god in special veneration. But more
interesting is the reference to the Lauhitya or Brahmaputra as a ‘sea’. This seems to be associated
with the tradition about the existence, in early times, of the Eastern Ocean (i. e., the Bay of
Bengal) near Dēvīkōṭṭa which is modern Bangarh in the Dinajpur District in the northern
part of Bengal, and with the presence in the central region of Bengal of large bils or lakes like
the Chalan.[3] Wide areas in the Mymensing District of Bengal (now in East Pakistan), through
which the Brahmaputra at present passes, are spoken of as the ‘sea’ even today. It is a low-lying country which for six or more months of the year is under water ; in that area, communication by boats of maundage varying with the stream and season is always possible. The coast
line of this ‘sea’ may be taken to be passing through Bhairab-bāzār, Bājitpur, Niklī, Ḍōmpārā
and Tarāil and then towards the north-east.
To the west of this line, the country is a bed of
dead and dying rivers. Equally interesting is the mention of the Kāmakūṭa hill, on which the
god Kāmēśvara and the goddess Mahāgaurī are said to have been installed. The same deities
are also mentioned in the Guākuchi plates[4] of king Indrapāla of the Pāla dynasty or the third
line of Prāgjyōtisha kings. The land granted by this charter is described as Uttara-kūlē Mandi-vishay-āntaḥpāti-Paṇḍarī-bhūmitō=’pakṛishṭa-dhānya-dvisahasr-ōtpattika-bhūmi, i.e., the land of
an inferior quality yielding 2,000 [drōṇas] of paddy out of the area called Paṇḍarī (modern
Pāṇḍuri Mauza in which the Raṅgiyā station on the old Assam Railway is situated) in the Mandi
district pertaining to Uttara-kūla. This Uttara-kūla. (literally ‘the north bank’) was apparently
a division of the kingdom of Prāgjyōtisha lying on the north bank of the Brahmaputra. In the
description of the boundaries of the above land, the Guākuchi inscription mentions several times
Mahāgaurī-Kāmēśvarayōḥ satka(or dēva-satka)-śāsana-Paṇḍarībhūmi, i. e., the land called
Paṇḍarī which was a gift land belonging to the deities Mahāgaurī and Kāmēśvara. The names
of the hill Kāmakūṭa and the god Kāmēśvara would suggest that the goddess Mahāgaurī was
no other than Kāmēśvarī otherwise called Kāmā or Kāmākhyā (literally ‘the goddess with
the name Kāmā’) whose temple stands near Gauhati[5] in Assam. According to the Kālikā
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[1] Cf. Kāmarūpa-śāsan-āvalī, p. 59, note 1.
[2] Ibid., pp. 73, 92, 117.
[3] Cf. pūrvē kila Dēvīkōṭṭa-samīpē paśchimē (sic. pūrvē) Pūrvōdadhir=āsīt in Bṛihaspati-Rāyamukuṭa’s
Padachandrikā (Select Inscriptions, Vol. I, p. 501). For references to the sea bordering on the country of
Prāgjyōtisha or Kāmarūpa, see Sachau, Alberuni’s India, I, p. 201 ; Rāmāyaṇa (Vaṅgavāsī ed.), Kishkindhā-kāṇḍa, chapter 42, verse 30, etc.
[4] Kāmarūpa-śāsan-āvalī, p. 136-37.
[5] Cf. The Śākta Pīṭhas, pp. 12-13, 15.
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