No. 1. China (now Madras Museum) Buddhist (?) stone inscription. Prakrit.
The subjoined inscription is incised on a stone, which was originally found on the sea-shore south of the Krishna, river close to the village of China in the Kistnà district, and is now deposited in the Madras Museum. G. Buhler edit it according to two rubbings, made over to him by Dr. Burgess. It contains six unequal lines,'all of which aro mutilated, the lower ones more than the upper ones. The characters are of the ordinary Andhra type, but rather ornamental. (EI)

1889 Buôhler, EI I, p. 95 f.; 1905 corr. by Fleet, JRAS 1905, p. 305; Luders list No 1340;
Lu: - Fragment. Opens with an invocation of Bhagavat and mentions the lord (araka), the chamberlain (mahataraka) Mahà . . . .
- raãî Gîtamiputasa araka-Siriyaãa-Sàtakanisa vasasatàya saìvachhara satavi . . maì 20 7 håmatànaì pakhaì catuthaì 4 di . . . . . . . . maì 5 åtiya puvàya

TEXT. (Bu)

1. sidhaì na[mo bha]gavato . . . . . .[vasa]raão Gotami-
2. putasa araka-Siriyaãa-Sàtakaíisa vasasatàya saìvachara sata[vi]-
3. maì 20+7 hematànaì pakhaì catuthaì 4 di . . . . . . maì 5 etiya
4. puvàya arakamahatarakena mahà . . . å . . . . . . . . .
5. yàjinà mahàdaì . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6. dhàya . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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L. 1. After bhagavato - 5-6 letters have been obliterated. The last two seem to have been vasa.
L. 3. The lacuna after di has to be filled up by di[vasaì paìca]maì
L. 4. The slanting stroke above ha in mahatarakena seems to be accidental. The next word may be mahè
araka=aryaka; mahataraka is probably a title and the same as the Sanskrit mahattara