5th_or_6th_century_Vadathika_Cave_Inscription,_Sanskrit,_Shaivism,_Anantavarman,_Gupta_script,_Ancient_Om_symbol.jpg
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Summary
Description 5th or 6th century Vadathika Cave Inscription, Sanskrit, Shaivism, Anantavarman, Gupta script, Ancient Om symbol.jpg |
English:
This is a Sanskrit inscription in Gupta script (parent of Devanagari) attributed to king Anantavarman. It was first published by Wilkins in 1790, eye-copied by Kittoe (above copy), transliterated by Rajendralal Mitra, translated with interpolations and interpretations by Fleet, restudied by Kielhorn in 1891.
This is a Shaivism inscription based on the content (see Fleet, 1888), and variously dated between 450 CE to late 6th-century. The caves themselves are dated to 3rd-century BCE, first used by the Ajivikas tradition monks, later by the Buddhist monks, and thereafter the Hindu monks. This is a photograph of sketches and inscriptions from a personal copy of an article published in 1847 by Markham Kittoe about the Barabar Caves in Bihar in the The Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal . This is found along with Kittoe's interpretation and explanation in Volume 16, pages 401-412 (note: Capt. Kittoe spelt it Burabur cave in Bahar). The original qualifies under wikimedia's PD-Art-100-70 guidelines. Any rights I have, I herewith donate to wikimedia with Creation Commons 4.0. |
Date | |
Source | Own work |
Author | Ms Sarah Welch |
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