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ARCH., ARTS, & MUSEUM REPORTS
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Pp. 3-7. Sravana Belgola: Survey of the town of Sravana Belgola and its surroundings, as also of the larger and smaller hills, Vindhyagiri and Chandragiri-the Jain matha in the town-Inspection of a collection of mss. bearing mostly on Jain literature.
Pp. 7-8. Jinanathapura: Sāntinātha basti in the village. Hale-Belgola: A ruined Jain temple with figures of Parsvanātha and Jinas.
Aghalaya A Chaturviṁśati-Tirthankara figure in front of the Malleśvara temple.
P. 9. Channarayapatna: Two beams built into the front portion of the Kesava temple are from some Jain temple.
Pp. 10-11. Hola Narsipur: Inscribed door-jambs of the Lakshminarasimha temple belonged at one time to a Jain temple-Another pretty structure is the Neminatha basti-Renovation of the Ankanatheśvara temple in Ankanathapura with materials of ruined Jain bastis, containing here and ther Jain epitaphs of about the 10th cent.
P. 16. Saligrama: Two Jain temples in the village, both dedicated to Anantanatha--worship by the Jains of two sculptured foot-prints on rock Gurugalare.
P. 18. Chikka Hanasoge: The three-celled temple of Adinatha -The place once an important flourishing Jain settlement, possessing at one time 64 bastis.
P. 22. Heggadadevankote: The Parsvanatha basti, with an inscription on the pedestal of the image of Parsvanatha.
P. 27. List of PHOTOGRAPHS of Jain bastis, etc.
Pp. 29-36, 50-51. EPIGRAPHS :
General-Old inscriptions near Lakkidone at Sravana BelgolaA few inscriptions of the Ganga period mostly consisting of old Jain epitaphs copied at Hole-Narsipur täluq, and short inscriptions discovered at Sravana Belgola-A Jain epitaph of the Kadamba dynasty of about 950. This record is built into the ceiling of the Subrahmanya temple at Ankanathapura, Hole Narsipur tāluq-An inscription (about 1100 A.D.) of the Kongalva king Dudda-Mallarasa, recording
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