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ARCH., ARTS, & MUSEUM REPORTS
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(c) Hoysala period
Pp. 43-49. An inscription at Belur of Visnuvardhana recording a
grant in 1129 A.D. to a Jain temple named Malli Jinālaya
-Epigraphs on the pedestals of images in temples of Pārsvanatha and Adinatha at Bastihalli near Halebid.
An inscription in the Someśvara temple at Belgami, dated in 1199, recording that during the reign of Ballala II, Heggade Siriyanna and a few others granted certain customs duties to Padmanandi-deva for the god Mallikāmoda-Santinatha-deva of the Hiriyabasadi at Balligrame-Description in details of two records, dated in 1207 A.D., and copied at Hanchi Sorab tāluk. The one on a stone lying in the pond to the south of the Virabhadra temple, the other in front of the ruined Naranārāyaṇa temple.
A record of King Narasimha III to the north of Bennegudda at Halebid, giving some interesting details about the Jain gurus of the Balātkāra-gaṇa-An inscription on the pedestal of the image in the Santinātha temple at Bastihalli near Halebid.
P. 59. MANUSCRIPTS :
Discovery of the earliest Saka date viz., 380 in the Jain work Lokavibhāga-Acquisition of an astrological work Jatakatilaka, written in 1049 A.D., by the Jain poet Sridharacharya, author of Chandraprabha-charita, a Kannada champu.
141 (IX)
Report, do, 1911-12.
Bangalore, 1912.
P. 3. Seringapatam: The Adiśvara temple, a Jain basti, with a seated figure of Adinātha.
P. 4. Kalasavadi: A place containing at one time numerous bastis or Jain temples.
P. 9. Talkad: An inscribed stab built into the wall of the Añjaneya temple appears to have belonged to some Jain temple-The site of the Jain temple converted to a private garden and the images removed to Mysore.
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