The Indian Analyst
 

South Indian Inscriptions

 

 

Contents

Index

Introduction

Contents

List of Plates

Additions and Corrections

Images

Authors

Contents

D. R. Bhat

P. B. Desai

Krishna Deva

G. S. Gai

B R. Gopal & Shrinivas Ritti

V. B. Kolte

D. G. Koparkar

K. G. Krishnan

H. K. Narasimhaswami & K. G. Krishana

K. A. Nilakanta Sastri & T. N. Subramaniam

Sadhu Ram

S. Sankaranarayanan

P. Seshadri Sastri

M. Somasekhara Sarma

D. C. Sircar

D. C. Sircar & K. G. Krishnan

D. C. Sircar & P. Seshadri Sastri

K. D. Swaminathan

N. Venkataramanayya & M. Somasekhara Sarma

Index

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

No. 42─ TWO INSCRIPTIONS OF THE TIME OF GANAPATI

(1 Plate)

D. C. SIRCAR, OOTACAMUND

About the end of the year 1952, I visited Gwalior with the purpose of attending the Fifteenth Session of the Indian History Congress and examining the inscriptions preserved in the Gwalior Museum. Among the epigraphs copied by me in the said Museum two were stone inscriptions[1] belonging to the reign of the Yajvapāla king Gaṇapati (known dates between 1292 and 1300 A.D.) of Nalapura (modern Narwar in the Shivapuri District of the former Gwalior State). These two epigraphs are edited in the following pages. They have both been noticed by several scholars. The first of them, stated to have been originally found at Surwāyā in the Shivapuri District of the former Gwalior State, was noticed by Hirananda Sastri in the Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India, 1903-04, Part II, pp. 286 f., and this notice was followed in D. R. Bhandarkar’s List of Inscriptions in Northern India, No. 636, and H. N. Dvivedi’s Gwalior Rājyake Abhilekh, No. 163. But unfortunately Sastri’s notice of the inscription contains some errors, the most important of which is that the epigraph does not record the benefactions of Rāṇā Adhigadēva of the Muchchhaka family but of Rāṇaka Chāchigadēva of the Lubdhaka dynasty. The other epigraph, found at Narwar in the same District, was noticed by A. Cunningham, ASIR, Vol. II, p. 315 ; F. Kielhorn, Ind. Ant., Vol. XXII, p. 81 ; M. B. Garde, ibid., Vol. XLVII, p. 241, and Annual Report of the Archaeological Department of the Gwalior State, V. S. 1971, No. 8 ; D. R. Bhandarkar, op. cit., No. 642 ; and H. N. Dvivedi, op. cit., No. 174. It has been said that the eulogy in question was composed by Śiva, son of Lōhaḍa. Actually, however, the poet’s name was Śivanābhaka who was the son of Lōhaṭa. The name of the person responsible for writing the letters on the stone is given as Amarasiṁha, though it is really Arasiṁha. There seems also to be some confusion about the week-day in the date of the record, which has sometimes been taken to be Friday, although it is actually Thursday. In any case, the published notices of both the inscriptions appear to be based on their inaccurate and incomplete transcripts since some of the interesting informations supplied by them have been altogether ignored.

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The inscriptions contain each a eulogy recording the construction of a step-well during the reign of the Yajavapāla monarch Gaṇapati. An interesting feature of these epigraphs as well as some others[2] of the type belonging to the time of the Yajvapāla kings of Nalapura (modern Narwar) is that they speak of a number of people who settled in the Yajvapāla dominions from Gōpādri or Gōpāchala (modern Gwalior). This was no doubt the result of the extinction of Hindu rule and establishment of the hold of the Turkish Muhammadans at Gwalior.[3] A number of these displaced people appear to have been of Māthura Kāyastha origin. Some of them (or at least their ancestors) were probably servants of the Hindu kings of Gwalior and a good many of them appear to have been absorbed in the services under the Yajvapāla kings of Nalapura. The inscriptions also show that some of the Kāyasthas of the Māthura community were assiduous students of Sanskrit literature and composed poems of no mean order.

1. Surwāyā Inscription of V. S. 1350

The inscribed stone is a squarish slab, the lines of writing being engraved on an excavated bed leaving a raised margin on all the four sides. There are 23 lines in the inscription, the last of

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[1] These are Nos. 145 and 142 of A. R. Ep., 1952-53, App. B.
[2] See ibid., Nos. 139 and 141 ; below, Vol. XXXIII, pp. 31 ff.
[3] See above, Vol. XXX, p. 148.

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