There are a number of copper plate and stone inscriptions as well as some inscribed medallions, terracotta tablets, seals and sealings in private possessions. They remain unedited and unpublished for several years. Attempt has been made here to bring to notice some of them.
Epigraphically discoveries from recently concluded excavated sites like Lalitgiri, Radhanagar and many more sites in and around the modem town of Jajpur have been included in this volume. In some of the papers the scholars have offered new interpretation of the already published inscriptions. Stimulating discussions on historical geography of specific regions/sub-regions, administrative divisions, regional state formations and similar other issues offer new perspectives of research. Only one article is on the recently acquired punch marked coins by the Odisha State Museum, Bhubaneswar. Scholars working on the early and early medieval history and culture of Odisha and India will fmd the volume useful and rewarding.
In fact they together with other allied disciplines, facilitate the historian in a bigger way in constructing knowledge about the past activities or happenings.
In the past two hundred years several thousands of inscriptions have been unearthed from different parts of India. They have been critically edited and published by the epigraphists from time to time in different journals of India. They build up a huge data base for critically looking at things from different angles and perspectives.
Apart from throwing light on the political developments and administrative structures, they make us understand the social fabric, the economic condition and the religious persuasions of the people living in a given time and space. Besides, they tell us about the paleography and orthography, language and grammar, rites and rituals, fasts and festivals, agriculture and irrigation, astronomy and art, music and dance, flora and fauna, historical geography and toponymy, weights and measures, coins and currency system, and so on and so forth. Thus, they touch upon almost every aspect of the life and culture of the people of India.
Indian epigraphy which has been so assiduously cultivated for the last two hundred years has seen many ups and downs. One of the main concerns for this rough trajectory is the dearth of seasoned epigraphists to handle the enormous volume of inscriptions piling up in different museums, departments and institutes. Those who know the script lack the basics of language and those who have command over language can hardly decipher the ancient writings. The matter does not stop here. Even epigraphists who have mastered both the language and script face ideational bankruptcy in interpreting the new and raw data derived from the vast mass of inscriptional literature. It is for this reason the field is left open for the historians to navigate the texts, select the words and phrases to suit their point of view and draw patterns and paradigms which pass on to the text books to be read by millions of teachers and students across the country. The problem gets compounded when alternate paradigms surface in the narratives using the same stock of data. No doubt it is an ongoing process and each Endeavour is worthy of its own merit, original arguments and unique perspectives. But inscriptions which have been so carefully and critically edited and published should not be considered as final. There is ample scope to revisit the already edited and published epigraphs and make necessary corrections in the reading of the texts, transliterations, translations and interpretations. Omission or commission of a single letter or a medial stroke often causes serious departure in understanding the text and context. The day this exercise will be undertaken by scrupulous epigraphists several models will fall apart and this will open up new interpretation of the revised texts.
Epigraphy is a tough subject. It requires the depth of knowledge not only in language and script, but also astronomy, mythology, art, iconography, literature, philosophy and religious developments. Scholars like J.F. Fleet, E. Hultzsch, F. Kiel horn, D.R Bhandarkar, RC. Majumdar, Krishna Sastri and D.C. Sircar, to name a few, contributed immensely to the study of Indian epigraphy because of their encyclopedic knowledge of ancient Indian cultural system. Today in our generation we can hardly find epigraphists, of course baring a few, who can match the depth of scholarship and commitment of the above scholars for furtherance of the study of Indian epigraphy. It posits a grave challenge to deal with the subject.
Book's Contents and Sample Pages
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Hindu (882)
Agriculture (86)
Ancient (1015)
Archaeology (593)
Architecture (532)
Art & Culture (851)
Biography (592)
Buddhist (545)
Cookery (160)
Emperor & Queen (494)
Islam (234)
Jainism (273)
Literary (873)
Mahatma Gandhi (381)
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