SII 12.16: original edition by V. Venkatasubba Ayyar – No. 16. (A.R. No. 65 of 1909). TIRUKKAḺUKKUṈṞAM, CHINGLEPUT TALUK, CHINGLEPUT DISTRICT. ON THE SECOND PILLAR IN THE UPPER VERANDAH OF THE ORUKAL-MAṆḌAPA ON THE HILL.

Editor: Emmanuel Francis.

Identifier: DHARMA_INSSIIv12p0i0016.

Summary: This is a damaged record engraved in Tamil characters, belonging to Narasiṅgappōttaraśar ‘who took Vātāpi (Bādāmi)’ and it mentions the god of ‘Mūlasthāna on the hill.’ The Mūlasthāna temple, according to a record1 of Rājakēsarivarman Āditya I, existed from the time of Skandaśishya whose endowment to it was confirmed by Vātāpikoṇḍa Narasiṁhavarman. Skandaśishya may be identified with Skandasēna the excavator of the cave at Vallam in the Chingleput district. The rock-cut maṇḍapa where the present inscription is found, is described in detail in the Epigraphical Report for 1909, page 72 and in the Memoir of the Archaeological Survey of India, No. 17, pages 19-21. It may be pointed out here that this is the third early Pallava inscription engraved in Tamil characters, so far known, the other two being those found in the caves at Vallam in the Chingleput district,2 and at Tirumayyam in the Pudukkottai State.3

Hand description:

Language: Undetermined.

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

Version: (97de750), last modified (914dcd3).

Commentary

Published in the Epigraphical Report for 1932-1933, page 55.4

Bibliography

Digital edition of SII 12.16 by Venkatasubba Ayyar 1943 converted to DHARMA conventions by Emmanuel Francis.

Primary

[SII] Venkatasubba Ayyar, V. 1943. South Indian inscriptions. Volume XII: The Pallavas (with introductory notes in English). South Indian Inscriptions 12. Madras: Government Press. Page 9, item 16.

Notes

  1. 1. Epigraphia Indica Vol. III. pp. 277 ff.
  2. 2. This inscription is published with plates in South Indian Inscriptions, Vol. II, pp. 340 ff.
  3. 3. No. 7a above, fn. 1
  4. 4. The blank in l. 3 of this page may be filled with the letters taṉ-kūṟṟu.