The General Introduction in the beginning of the work is an original piece of work negotiating with the corpus of epigraphically literature of the period and arguing for a spatial spread of state-so city in the relatively difficult terrai The formation of the mandala stores i these sub-regions and their polifical onomie interactions with the la gional polities have been discussed a ength to formulate a perspective on the process of state formation. Sustenance of the regional polities, it is maintained, largely rested on the material foundations than cult appropriations. The process of cult appropriation should be viewed as an afterthought and not a concomitant development.
Students and scholars working on early medieval Odisha and India will definitely find it worth and enlightening.
I have made a thorough reading or re-reading of all the published and unpublished inscriptions of the minor ruling dynasties of Odisha and carefully prepared this volume for the benefit of the scholars working on various aspects of the history and culture of India. Some of the inscriptions were discovered very recently and they have also been incorporated in the volume. The volume contains two sections. In the first section the general features of the inscriptions such as the language, script, orthography, etc.. and an outline history of the ruling dynasties has been prepared. The introduction of the dynasty largely included the genealogical and chronological history of the family as well as their territorial extent. New interpretations regarding the date of inscriptions, origin of families, their relationship with the overlord, administrative arrangements, and many other such problems have been examined in the light of both the internal and circumstantial evidences. In the second section, the texts and the abstracts of each inscription of the minor ruling families have been prepared. There are a total of eighty-seven copper plate inscriptions which have been incorporated in the volume. Of these the photographs of eighty-four inscriptions have been appended for the benefit of scholars. The photographs of the other three inscriptions namely, the Puri plate of Kulastambhadeva of Sulki family, the Bonai plate of Vinitatunga of Tunga family and the Khillingar plates of Kalyanadevi of the time of Dänarnava of the Ganga family of Amvävadi-mandala have not been published in any journal and have been lost permanently. Therefore, we could not include them is me volume. Interestingly, there is no trace of any stone inscription of these ruling families.
**Contents and Sample Pages**
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Hindu (876)
Agriculture (85)
Ancient (994)
Archaeology (567)
Architecture (525)
Art & Culture (848)
Biography (587)
Buddhist (540)
Cookery (160)
Emperor & Queen (489)
Islam (234)
Jainism (271)
Literary (867)
Mahatma Gandhi (377)
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