________________
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.
Vol. X. p. 104, No. 96, text line 2; the biruda has there been translated, by "he
whose glances were (as bright) as jewels."-J. F. F. Page 225, line 10 from bottom, - for Eastern India, read Southern India. 251 ff.; the Didger inscription. In editing this record, I overlooked a faot to which
Professor Kielhorn has kindly drawn my attention. Just as here we have Dosi as the name of the governor of the Banay&ei province under king Kattiyara, so also we have Dosirkja as the name of the person at whose request, as recorded in the Vakkaleri plates of A.D. 757 (see Vol. V. above, p. 201), the Western Chalukya king Kirtivarman II. granted the village of Salliyûr, which was in the Panangal vishaya and consequently in the Banavasi provinoe. The Dosi of the Didgur inscription may well have been a grandson of the Dosiraja of the Vakkalëri plates. At any rate, the identity of these two names Dosi and Dosiršja, and their connection with the same part of the country, is another point in favour of the view that Kattiyars was a
Chalukya.-J. F. F. , 286, line 20 f. from bottom.- Professor Kielhorn contributes the following remark on this
date :-"For Saka-Samvat 789 expired it corresponds to the 23rd December AD. 887. On this day the 9th tiths of the dark half of Pausha ended 12 b. 3 m. after mean sunrise, and the Uttarayana-Sankranti took place during the same tithi,
1h, 10 m. before mean sunrise." , 286, line 18 ff. from bottom.-In Ind. Ant. Vol. XXXI. p. 254 f. Dr. Fleet has shewn
that Kampilya, Dhokkhakuti, Dabbhellanks (this is the correct reading). Apasundara and kalapallike correspond to the modern villages Kaphleta, Chokhad, Dabhol, Asundar and Karoli, and that the river Mandakint is now
called Mindhola. , 321, line 15 from bottom, --for Kakak Adi, read Kasakuļi. 324, note 1, line 4 f., and page 325, line 5,- for Ommapa-Udaiyar, read Jammapan
Udaiyar. # 347, line 23,- for -Udaiya[x®], read - Udaiya[ro].