Book Title: Epigraphia Indica Vol 03
Author(s): Jas Burgess
Publisher: Archaeological Survey of India

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Page 401
________________ 332 EPIGRAPHIA INDICA. [VOL. IIT. . them, a short line slightly curved downwards from left to right. Probably, the standard forms, of both the short and the long vowel, are those which we have in A., and the others are only fancy modifications of them. But the type is essentially the same throughout. It differs totally from the type followed in all the other records quoted above, and exhibited in them by the short , which consists of two circles with a twirl, of varying shapes, below them. I do not find any close resemblance to it anywhere else. But it may have been developed from the short i of the earlier Eastern Chalukya records, which was formed by & wavy line or two semicircles joined (easily capable of being developed into the straight line of A.), with two dots or circles below it (see, for instance, Ind. Ant. Vol. XIII. p. 214 and Plate, ih=aijaté and ivrátipútan, text line 40); the long i and the short , however, have no connection at all with the long i and the , long or short, of the earlier Eastern Chalukya records (see, for instance, id. Vol. VII. p. 17, and Plate, Esánata) and uttaratah, text lines 54, 55, and Vol. XIII. p. 186, and Plate, ari and úru, text lines 17, 18, 20, 24). The initial 6, which, with an addition, forms ai (see éka, étébhyd, and asvuli, A. lines 10, 12, 18), is a still more remarkable letter. It has no connection with the original triangular character, with the apex placed downwards, from which were derived the forms which appear in the Gwalior, Pohoa, Asnî, Khajuraho, Harsba, Dewal, and Nanyaurà records ;' nor with the & of the earlier Eastern Chalukys records (see, for instance, Ind. Ant. Vol. VII. p. 17, and Plate, tad, line 55, and Vol. XIII. p. 214, and Plate, Ekadasa, line 27): and it can hardly have been developed from even another form of the & which we meet with in Gujarat (id. Vol: XII. p. 159, and Plate, Eldpur, line 14). In Prinsep's Antiquities, Vol. II. pp. 40, 41, Plate xxxix., Mr. Thomas has given both the ê and the ai, as we have them in A., as Bengali characters of the tenth century A.D., - meaning really the eleventh century, as is evident from the fuller heading of his eighth line of alphabets in the first half of his Table. But I have not been able to verify his authority for this, an inscription from Adisur,' Bupposed to be dated A.D. 1065. As far as my knowledge goes, the forms of 6 and ai, used in A., are unique in epigraphic records. And, by Mr. Thomas himself in another Table (loc. cit. p. 53), and by & work entitled Grammatography (see page 45 of it), forms which are practically identical with these, are given as the modern Bengált forms. The initial au, which is but very seldom met with, occurs in audalya, F. line 40. It is different in form from, but it may possibly be a development (and, if so, it is certainly a later form) of, the au which we have in auttarésvara) in line 22 of the Harsha inscription of A.D. 973. As in the case of the & and the ai, the form which we have here is, as far as my knowledge goes, unique in epigraphic records. And, while, as in the case of the & and the ai, Mr. Thomas has in his first Table allotted this form to the tenth century A.D., - meaning really the eleventh century, in his second Table he has given a practically identical form as the modern Bengali form; and the Grammatography does the same. 1 Curiously enough, if we remove the straight line which forms the top of the long exhibited in A., we bave, exactly, the short i of the Dogadh, Gwalior, Harsha, Dewal, Nanyaard, and Jhůst records. But this can be only a chance coincidence. The Chicacole Ganga grant of Satyavarman (Ind. Ant. Vol. XIV. p. 10, and Plate; the genuineness of this record is open to question) presents an equally peculiar form of the short i,- exactly an inversion of the exhibited in A.,-two cireles at the top, and a straight or sligbtly curved line below them (ce iti, line 20, and idant, lide 22). The only approximation that I can find to this, is the i of ina in line 1 of the Kad grant (Gujarat) of Malaraja I., of A.D. 986, where the vowel is formed by two semicircles, with a wavy line below them (Ind. Ant. Vol. VI. p. 192, Plate), but throughout the rest of that record the form is the usual onetwo semicircles, with a twirl below them. + The Chicacole Ganga grant of Devendravarman (Ind. Asl. Vol. XIII. p. 274, and Plate; the genuineness of this record, also, is open to question) shews an exact inversion of this original form, triangle with the apex placed upwards (see Gram, line 23). * Based on tbe German compilation of F. Ballhorn, and published (1861) by Trübner & Co.

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