The Indian Analyst
 

South Indian Inscriptions

 

 

Contents

Index

Introduction

Contents

List of Plates

Additions and Corrections

Images

Contents

Chaudhury, P.D.

Chhabra, B.ch.

DE, S. C.

Desai, P. B.

Dikshit, M. G.

Krishnan, K. G.

Desai, P. B

Krishna Rao, B. V.

Lakshminarayan Rao, N., M.A.

Mirashi, V. V.

Narasimhaswami, H. K.

Pandeya, L. P.,

Sircar, D. C.

Venkataramayya, M., M.A.,

Venkataramanayya, N., M.A.

Index-By A. N. Lahiri

Other South-Indian Inscriptions 

Volume 1

Volume 2

Volume 3

Vol. 4 - 8

Volume 9

Volume 10

Volume 11

Volume 12

Volume 13

Volume 14

Volume 15

Volume 16

Volume 17

Volume 18

Volume 19

Volume 20

Volume 22
Part 1

Volume 22
Part 2

Volume 23

Volume 24

Volume 26

Volume 27

Tiruvarur

Darasuram

Konerirajapuram

Tanjavur

Annual Reports 1935-1944

Annual Reports 1945- 1947

Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Volume 2, Part 2

Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Volume 7, Part 3

Kalachuri-Chedi Era Part 1

Kalachuri-Chedi Era Part 2

Epigraphica Indica

Epigraphia Indica Volume 3

Epigraphia
Indica Volume 4

Epigraphia Indica Volume 6

Epigraphia Indica Volume 7

Epigraphia Indica Volume 8

Epigraphia Indica Volume 27

Epigraphia Indica Volume 29

Epigraphia Indica Volume 30

Epigraphia Indica Volume 31

Epigraphia Indica Volume 32

Paramaras Volume 7, Part 2

Śilāhāras Volume 6, Part 2

Vākāṭakas Volume 5

Early Gupta Inscriptions

Archaeological Links

Archaeological-Survey of India

Pudukkottai

EPIGRAPHIA INDICA

a grant. This description is substantially the same as found in the Baripada Museum and Jurerupur plates of the same king and the Talmul plate of Dhruvānanda and has been already discussed by us.[1] As regards the slight modification of the language in our record, it may be noted that the king is here called samadhigatapañchamahāśabda-mahāsāmantādhipati-vanditapura-mabhaṭṭāṛaka-Nanda-Mahārāja-Rāṇaka-śrī-Dēvānandadēva insteadof paramabhaṭṭāraka-samadhi-gata-panchamahāśabda-mahāsāmantādhipati-śrī-Dēvānandadēva as found in the other charters. In connection with the second passage quoted above, we remarked that “ the ambiguity (as it may also suggest that the ruler in question was himself a Paramabhaṭṭāraka) may be intentional ” and suggested that the rulers of the Nanda family may have “ originally owned allegiance to the Bhauma-Karas and begun to rule more or less independently after the latter’s decline ”. It will be seen that the epithets applied to Dēvānanda II in the present record (cf. lines 3-4 of the spurious Narsingpur plate) are similarly ambiguous as they may be taken to be a mixture of both imperial and feudatory titles, which is often found to have been adopted by subordinate rulers to indicate their newly achieved semi-independent status.[2]

Lines 26-33 of our inscription record the grant of a village called Iṇḍēḍḍā situated in the Jīlōṇḍā vishaya of the Airāvaṭṭa mmaṇḍala, made by the king by means of a copper-plate charter in favour of Yaśōdatta, son of Māhōla, for the increase of his own merit as well as his parents’ The donee was resident of Vaṇiggōtrā ; but his family is stated to have hailed from a locality called Rāhīyavaḍa, He is described as szttva-gēhin, śāstr-ōpādhyāya and kāyastha, while verse 16 in line 38 of the inscription seems to suggest that he was the Sadhivigrahin (minister for war and peace) of king Dēvānanda II. The fact that Yaśōdatta’s gōtra, charaṇa, śākhā, etc., are conspicuous by their absence in his descriptin may suggest that the donee of our record was not a Brāhmaḍa and that his epither Kāyastha possibly indicates not his profession but actually his caste. But he is stated to have been not only a sattva-gēhin, i.e., ‘ a virtuous householder ’, but also a śāstrōpādhyāya,[3] i.e., teacher of the śātra ’, although what śātra is particularly meant is not clear. Since Yaśōdatta seems to have been a minister of the king, it is not impossible to think that he was a teacher of the science of politics. If these suggestions are acceptable, the inscription under review gives us valuable information regarding the crystallization of the professional community of scribes into the caste of Kāyasthas as well as their honoured social position in early Orissa.[4]

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Lines 33-38 quote some of the usual imprecatory and benedictory verses which are followed by another stanza saying that the praśasti or eulogy (apparently referring particularly to the introductory verses discussed above) was composed by Yaśōdatta who was serving king Dēvānanda II as Sandhivigrahin. Line 39, with which the document ends, gives the date, year 184, and says that the eulogy was engraved by Lōgayāka.

Of the geographical names mentioned in the charter, the name Airāvaṭṭa-maṇḍala, which appears to have comprised the kingdom of the Nandas, is belived to be preserved in that of modern Ratagarh within the Banki Police Station in the Cuttack District, while, Jayapura, capital of the Nanda kings, has been identified with a village of that name in the Dhenkanal District. The name of the district called Jīlōṇḍā reminds us of modern Jilinda in Daspalla. It is difficult to identify the villages of Inḍēḍḍā, Rāhīyavaḍa and Vaṇiggōtrā.

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[1] Above, Vol. XXVII, p. 329.
[2] Cf. Bhandarkar’s List, No. 1555, etc. In the charter under discussion, the king is called mahāsāmantādhipativandita-paramabhaṭṭāraka (i. e., a paramount king worshipped by the feudatories having many subordinates) or mahāsāmantādhipati-vanditaparamabhaṭṭāraka (i. e., a feudatory having many subordinates and worshipping his overlord).
[3] The word upādhyāya means a teacher or preceptor in general. Sometimes it is used to indicate a sub-teacher who gives instructions for wages only in a part of a Vēda. An upādhyāya is often regarded as inferior to an āchārya. Cf. Manusmṛti, II, 141.
[4] Cf. above, Vol. XXVIII, p. 273.

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