SII 1.121: original edition by Eugen Hultzsch – PART III. NOTES AND FRAGMENTS. No. 115-123. INSCRIPTIONS OF THE MĀRGASAHĀYEŚVARA TEMPLE AT VIRIÑCHIPURAM. No. 121. ON THE BASE OF THE BACK OF THE FRONT GOPURA, TO THE RIGHT.

Editor: Emmanuel Francis.

Identifier: DHARMA_INSSIIv01p0i0121.

Summary: 1. King: the illustrious mahāmaṇḍaleśvara,1 the illustrious Vīrapratāpa, (the younger brother and successor of) Vīra-Narasiṁha-deva, Kṛishṇadeva-mahārāya (of Vijayanagara).2 2. Date: Śaka 1435 expired and the Śrīmukha year current.

Hand description:

Language: Undetermined.

Repository: South Indian Inscriptions (Original Edition) (south-indian-inscriptions).

Version: (2603b6d), last modified (829da8c).

Edition

[text not available]

Bibliography

Digital edition of SII 1.121 by Hultzsch 1890 converted to DHARMA conventions by Emmanuel Francis.

Primary

[SII] Hultzsch, Eugen Julius Theodor. 1890. South-Indian inscriptions, Tamil and Sanskrit, from stone and copper-plate edicts at Mamallapuram, Kanchipuram, in the North Arcot district, and other parts of the Madras Presidency, chiefly collected in 1886-87. Volume I. South Indian Inscriptions 1. Madras: Government Press. Page 132, item 121.

Notes

  1. 1. Here follow the same birudas, as in No. 81, lines 2 to 7.
  2. 2. According to two Hampi inscriptions of Śaka 1430 (for 1431 ?) expired the Śukla year (see paragraph 2 of my Progress Report for December 1888 and January 1889 Madras G.O., 26th February 1889, No. 186, Public), and according to a copper-plate grant, which I have noticed in the Indian Antiquary, Vol. XIII, p. 154, Kṛishṇarāya was the younger brother of Vīra-Nṛisiṁha or Vīra-Nārasiṁha, and both were the eldest sons of Narasa or Nṛisiṁha (see No. 115).