169(47). Amarāvatč buddhist stone inscription. (No. 479 of 1913).
On a fragment (corner) of a sculptured slab. |
Burgess, Archeological Survey of Southern India, Vol. 1, Plate LXI, No. 55. Translation by Luders, List, No. 1287; R. Chanda, EI, XV. No. 13.47 |
TEXT.
1 . . . . . ka sa-bhariyāya Chaka[data]ya sa-pitukāya
2 . . . . . . . . ha[ya] sa-nāti-mita-badhavehi deya-dhama
3 . . . . . . . . patiōhapita soōhika-paōo abāta-mālā cha
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'(This) slab with svastika and an abātamāla are the pious gifts established by
Cakradatta, wife of . . . ka, together with her father . . . . . . and their grandsons,
friends and relatives' (RCh.)
_________________________
The sign hetween ka and ya in line 1 is very indistinct. Luders takes it as nh. (RCh) [I
would take it as a da followed by a ta written below the line. For abātamāla cf.
inscriptions Nos. 51-2 in Professor Hultzsch's article on the Amaravati inscriptions in
the Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlāndischen Gesellschaft, Vol. XL, pp. 345-6.-Ed.
F.W.Thomas]