No. 1. Intwa clay sealing.

(BCh) The ancient site of Ènòwà is situated on a hill, in the midst of a thick jungle, about three miles from the famous rock at Jónàgaäh in Sauràøòra, that contains inscriptions of Aùîka, Rudradàman and Skandagupta. The name Ènòwà owes its origin to the fact that the site has since long been yielding bricks (ènòs) in abundance.
During the winter of 1949, the Government of Sauràøòra had a small-scale excavation conducted here under the direction and supervision of Mr. G. V. Acharya, once the Curator of the Archeological Section of the Prince of Wales Museum of Western India, Bombay. He has laid bare remains of a couple of Buddhist monasteries. One finds that their pavements, walls, drains and platforms were all made of bricks of extra large size. In plan, they closely resemble those exposed at Taxila. Further diggings at Ènòwà must yield many more antiquities. Mr. Acharya has collected an assortment of relics from this site in the shape of tiles, terracotta, pottery, beads and the like, but no inscription. The only inscribed object found there is a baked clay sealing. It is now housed in the local museum at Jónàgaäh along with the other Ènòwà antiquities.
B. Ch. Chabra - EI, XXVIII, 30.


TEXT.

Mahàràja-Rudrasåna-vihàrå bhikøu-saìghasya