EPIGRAPHIA INDICA
Tîvaradêva’s edict was issued from Śrîpura (l. 2), which Dr. Fleet has identified with the
modern Sirpur,[1] and is dated on the 27th day of the month Jyaishṭha in the 9th year of his
reign (l. 40), i.e. about two years after the Râjim plates. The king granted the village Meṅkiḍḍaka in the district of Sundarikâmârga (l. 22) for the benefit of a rest-house (sattra) which had been established at Bilvapadraka at the request of his son-in-law Nannarâja (l. 25 f.). I am unable to identify the geographical names mentioned in the preceding
sentence.
TEXT.[2]
First Plate.

Second Plate ;
First Side.
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[1] Gupta Inscriptions, p. 293.
[2] From the original copper-plates.
[3] Expressed by a symbol.
[4] Read º.
[5] Read º .
[6] Read º º.
[7] Read º º.
[8] Read º .
[9 ] Read .
[10] Read .
[11] Read º º.
[12 ] Read .
[13 ] Read .
[14 ] Read º .
[15] Read º º.
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