Notes.

L. 1. SK read: îì svasti [|*], îì expressed by symbol. (For letters in []) A portion of the first plate is broken off. Thus six letters of line 1. seven of line 2, eight, of line 3 and nine each of lines 5 and 6 are lost. But the lost letters can be restored with the help of other charters of the king. (SK) A portion of the first plate on its proper left having been broken off, some letters at the end of all the six lines on this plate are lost. However, except in line 4, the lost portion can be restored with certitude with the help of other records of Mahà-Sudeva ràja. The same has been included in square brackets with asterisk marks in this as well as in the following lines. (AMS)
L. 2. (For letters in []) A portion of the first plate is broken off. Thus six letters of line 1. seven of line 2, eight, of line 3 and nine each of lines 5 and 6 are lost. But the lost letters can be restored with the help of other charters of the king.
L. 3. Same note, as to L. 1-2.
L. 4. SK read: vu[...; This portion of line 4, which is broken off, contained the name of the village and probably also the district in which it was situated.(SK). Katare reads it as vu; but a close look at the letter v in other lines of this record shows that its lower part is a more or less perfect square, whereas the lower part of the akøara in question is a rectangle which is characteristic of the letter c. We, therefore, prefer to read it as cu. This lost portion contained part of the name of the donated village and that of the district in which it was situated as in other records of the dynasty. The name of the district began with the akshara cu which is the last preserved letter of this line. In view of the sameness of the opening and concluding letters of the compound and the number of the lost letters (i.e. 9) the missing aksharas may, with much probability, be restored as -Ilàäasèmàbhogèya Keùa- with the help of the Kurud plates of Narendra, vide No. I:II above. Thus, Cullàäasèmà and Keùavaka appear to have been the names of the district and the donated village respectively. For a detailed discussion of this question see Studies in Indian Epigraphy, ii, 50ff. (AMS)
L. 5-6. Same note as to Ll 1-2. (SK); (For vakå) The name of the donated village ended with vaka; but the earlier part of the name, which formed the concluding portion of the last line, is lost. However, as stated above, the name of the village seems to have been Keùavaka. (AMS) (For samà-) The medial à is indicated by the downward elongation of the right vertical of the letter m. (AMS)
L. 11. SK read vijãàpyàs. AMS in notes: read vijãàpya tàmra-.
L. 13. SK read: prativatsya(sa)tha.
L. 16. Metre: Vasantatilakà.
L. 17. SK read -pàlayitavyà.
L. 19. Metre: Indravajrà. (SK); AMS in notes (for yaXkàãcanaì): The sign of jihvamultya is exactly identical in shape with ò and the medial a is attached to the lower end of its right vertical exactly as in me in line 24.
L. 21. Metre: Anuøòubh for this and the following two stanzas.
L. 22. SK read bhómiõ ta(mis=ta)sya.
L. 25. SK read Drîíasiêghåía(siìhåna). AMS: This line is engraved in the middle of the plate. The record was evidently intended to be completed on the inner side of the third plate, but the engraver could not carry out this intention.