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EPIGRAPHY & NUMISMATICS
XLVII
P. 1515. Trichinopoly Dist., Kulittalai tāluk. Palaiyasangaḍam: A hamlet of Mahadanapuram containing some Jain remains.
XLVIII
211
P. 1623. Pudukkottai State.
Ammāsatram : At the entrance of the natural cave east of the rock known as Aluruṭṭimalai. A Tamil record of Tribhuvanachakravartin Sundara Pandya, mentioning one Dharmadeva Acharya, the pupil of Kanakachandra Pandita (who was evidently a Jain teacher).
XLIX
P. 1665. Vizagapatam District. Bimlipatam tāluk.
2. Bhogapuram (Telugu and Sanskrit). On a slab in the village. Records in §. 1109, 11th year of the eastern Ganga king Anantavarmadeva that the merchant Kannamanayaka constructed the Jain temple called Rajaraja Jīnālaya at Bhōgapura and gave two puttis of land to that temple with the consent of the Desi-Raṭṭadlu (i.e., the villagers who belonged to the mercantile class)
L
P. 1672. Vizagapatam Dist., Srungavarapukōta tāluk.
4. Lakkavarapukōta: (Hindi, Nagari). On the pedestal of a mutilated Jain image preserved in the Virabhadra temple. Dated Sam. 1548. Refers to the image of Bhattaraka Jinachandra of Múla-Sangha.
LI
P. 1696. Travancore State.
2. Chitaral: In the Tiruchchaṇattumalai (i.e., the mountain of the Charanas, Sramaņas or Jains), later on the centre of a Bhagavati