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Siddhasena Divākara and Vikramāditya
175
143. Bhāratīya Vidyā, II, 1941, p. 212 f. 144. 1.1., p. 84. This ‘Torarāya' is identified with the notorious
Toramāņa, who, in this way, likewise becomes a Śrāvaka. 145. The articles by Muni Nyāyavijaya and Muni Darśanavijaya
in Jaina Satya Prakāśa, Dīpotsavi Anka, Vol. 7, p. 7ff., as
well as p. 145 and p. 151. 146. Vide R. N. Dandekar : The History of the Guptas, Poona,
1941, p. 148 f. 147. The word “Hari' is found to be used in this very same sense
by the author of the Vadnagar Fort Prasasti, in which King Kumārapāla of Gujarat is described as “Harir iti jñātaḥ prabhāvāj jane': vide Muni Darsanavijaya's article in Jaina
Satya Prakāśa, 1.1., p. 159, Note. 148. For Samudragupta, vide the Allahabad and Eran Pillar Ins
criptions ( Sircar, 1.1., p. 254ff. ), for Candragupta the Mathurā, Udayagiri and Meharauli Inscriptions ( 1.1., p. 269 ff. ), and for both V. A. Smith ( 1.1., p. 297 ff. ), R. S. Tripathi, Religious Toleration under the Imperial Guptas ( I.
II. Q., XV, p. 1 ff. ), and R. N. Dandekar, 1.1., p. 44 ff. 149. On coins : vide Ojha, 1.1., p. 158 ff. 150. Vide the Allahabad Pillar Inscription, Sircar, 1.1., p. 156,
Para 17. 151. Vide the colophon of the preserved part of Samudragupta's
Krsnacarita, as per the notice of 'S.R.S' in Indian Culture,
Vol. X, p. 78f. 152. Vide V. A. Smith, 1.1., p. 347, as well as the notice of D.
B. Diskalkar in the Journal of the Numismatic Society of India, Vol. V, Part II, p. 136 f., for which reference I am indebted to Mr. S. L. Katre, my colleague at the Scindia
Oriental Institue, Ujjain. 153. A. S. Altekar, A New Gupta King ( J.B.O.R.S., XIV, p. 223
ff. and XV, p. 134 ); D. R. Bhandarkar, New Light on the Early Gupta History ( Mālaviya Commemoration Volume,
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