EIAD 477. Railing pillar from the Amaravati stūpa

Version: (6b33b5d), last modified (6b33b5d).

Edition

⟨1⟩ kala()airagāmasa thabo

Apparatus

⟨1⟩ kala()airagāmasakalavairagāmasa GhThe reading ḷai is especially unclear.

Translation

Pillar by the village of Kalaḷaira.

Bibliography

This edition by Vincent Tournier. Encoded in XML by Fu Fan in 2026.

Primary

[S1974] Sarma, I. Karthikeya. 1974. “Some more inscriptions from Amarāvati excavations and the chronology of the Mahāstūpa.” JESI 1, pp. 60–74. [URL]. Page 70.

[Gh] Ghosh, A. 1979. “The early phase of the Stupa at Amaravati, South-East India.” Ancient Ceylon — Journal of the Archaeological Survey Department of Sri Lanka 3, pp. 97–103. Page 101, item 1, plate I.

[S1985] Sarma, I. Karthikeya. 1985. “Early sculptures and epigraphs from South-East India: New evidence from Amarāvatī.” In: Indian epigraphy: Its bearing on the history of art. Edited by Frederick M. Asher and Govind Swamirao Gai. New Delhi: Oxford & IBH; American Institute of Indian Studies, pp. 15–24. Page 17.

Secondary

ARIE 1959–60. Annual report on Indian epigraphy for 1959-60. Edited by Dines Chandra Sircar. Delhi: Manager of Publications (Department of Archaeology), 1963. Item B.25.

Gupta, S. S. 2008. Sculptures and antiquities in the Archaeological Museum, Amarāvatī. New Delhi: D.K. Printworld. Page 15, item 3.

Shimada, Akira. 2013. Early Buddhist architecture in context: The Great stūpa at Amarāvatī (ca. 300 BCE–300 CE). Brill’s Indological Library 43. Leiden: Brill. [URL]. Page 136.

Francis, N. J. 2016. A source book of the early Buddhist inscriptions of Amarāvatī. Golden jubilee series. Shimla: Indian Institute of Advanced Study. Page 61, item 5.