Book Title: Epigraphia Indica Vol 27
Author(s): Hirananda Shastri
Publisher: Archaeological Survey of India

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Page 100
________________ No. 131 SIVANVAYAL PILLAR-INSCRIPTION OF PALLAVA SLAVARMAN 59 No. 13.-SIVANVAYAL PILLAR INSCRIPTION OF PALLAVA SIMHAVARMAN (1 Plate) M. VENKATARAMAYYA, OOTACAMUND Sivanvāyal is a village situated about 9 miles north-east of Tiruval!ūr, the headquarters of the tāluk of the same name in the Chingleput District, Madras Presidency. The village was visited by me in the course of the epigraphical survey of the tāluk in November 1944.1 The antiquity of its name goes back to Pallava times, the village being mentioned under that name in a record of Pallava Kampavarman (c. 850 A.D.) at the place. In Tamil, the name Sivanvāyal means the abode or the entrance (vāyal s vāśal) of Siva and the Sanskrit rendering of the name would be Sivadvāra. True to its import, the village contains the remains of an old temple of Siva.which is the main attraction to the eye as one approaches the village from the north. The remains at present visible at the site are a linga of huge size, a nandi in front and débris consisting of granite slabs some of which are dressed, having been evidently used in the construction. A little away from the Siva temple stands a temple of Vishnu, of simple construction, comprising an ardhamandapa and the garbhagriha. The deity, which is under worship in this temple, is locally called Vaikuntha-Varadarāja-perumā!. Although the present structure appears to be modern, the temple seems to be an ancient one, because an inscription in Pallava-Grantha characters of about the 9th century A.D. engraved on a stone now built into the ceiling of the temple, refers to the god as Vaikunthanātha, which is preserved in the present appellation of the god. At the entrance to this shrine was found a massive broken pillar of reddish-grey granite which the local residents used as one of the steps. On examination, the pillar was found to contain on its three sides an inscription engraved in ornate Pallava-Grantha characters. The pillar, which stands just four feet high, is about one foot square in section. Up to a height of 31 feet from the bottom, the pillar is cubical but not geometrically perfect, as two sides of it, which are 1 foot 2 inches broad, are broader than the other two by 2 inches. The middle portion of the shaft just above the lower cubical part has its angles bevelled off, thereby making this portion of the pillar octagonal in section. The cubical portion at the bottom is decorated with the design of a conventional lotus-flower similar to the lotus medallions appearing on the stone railings of the Amaravati stūpa.? As only a part, viz., the lower part, of the middle octagonal portion, about foot in height, is preserved, it would seem that nearly half the pillar must have been lost at the top. The pillar should have formed part of a monument the nature or the shape of which it is not possible now to determine. . The characters of the inscription are what is termed Pallava-Grantha alphabet, and they closely resemble those of the Trichinopoly cave pillar inscriptions of Pallava Mahēndra as also those of the Bādāmi inscription of Mahēndra's son Narasimhavarman I. Bühler cites the latter inscription as the latest example of the archaic variety of the Grantha alphabet.10 In general execution, 1 The village was again visited by Dr. B. Ch. Chhabra, Government Epigraphist for India, in 1945, when photographs of the antiquities and fresh estampages of the inscriptions were secured. A. R. E., No. 13 of 1944-45. . Cf. Kañchivayal and Kanchidvāra which are used synonymously in the Udayēndiram Plates of Pallava Nandivarman (8. I. ., Vol. III, p. 365; Ep. Ind., Vol. III, p. 145; Ind. Ant., Vol. XXII, p. 67 n. 63). Names of places similarly ending in vayal or va dal like Kudavālal, eto., are common in the Tamil country. The god is locally called Sivanändisvara. * A. R. E., No. 10 of 1944-45. A. R. E., No. 11 of 1944-45. * A. H. Longhurst: Pallava Architecture, Part I: Mem. Arch. Sur. India, No. 17, p. 9. The decorative style of such pillars of the Pallava period is characterised by Longhurst as the Mahendra style. .8.1. I., Vol. XII, Pallavas : Pl. I, opp. p. 5. .S.I.I., Vol. XI, pt. 1, plate opp. p. 1. 10 Indian Palaeography (Ind. Ant., Vol. XXXIII, App.), p. 70.

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