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Home / Science / 15th Century Boundary Stone Found Near Palani

15th Century Boundary Stone Found Near Palani

18 Jan

•

Summary

  • A 15th-century 'vamana kal' boundary stone was discovered.
  • The stone features symbols related to Vishnu's Vamana incarnation.
  • It marks land belonging to a Vishnu temple priest from the past.
15th Century Boundary Stone Found Near Palani

An independent team of archaeologists has discovered a significant 15th-century 'vamana kal', a boundary stone, in the Dindigul district of Tamil Nadu. The Vaishnavite stone, measuring 30x60cm, was found partially buried in a farmland west of Palani.

Carved with symbols representing Vamana, the fifth incarnation of Lord Vishnu, the slab includes depictions of the sun, moon, a hand stick, and a water jug. These symbols are referenced in ancient Sanskrit literature as gifts from various gods to Vishnu during his Vamana avatar, according to archaeologist Narayanamoorthy.

The 'vamana kal' was historically erected on donated lands to signify ownership. The inscription on this particular stone states the land belonged to 'Matha Bhattar', a priest of a local Vishnu temple. Paleographic analysis suggests the inscription dates to the 15th century, a period when lands named 'Amarapujanga Chaturvedi Mangalam' were often gifted to Brahmin priests.

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Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
A 'vamana kal' is a 15th-century boundary stone discovered in Dindigul, India, featuring symbols related to Lord Vishnu's Vamana incarnation.
The symbols represent Vamana, the fifth incarnation of Lord Vishnu, and include a sun, moon, hand stick, and water jug, as mentioned in ancient Sanskrit literature.
The land marked by the 'vamana kal' belonged to 'Matha Bhattar', a priest of a Vishnu temple in the ancient region known as Amarapujanga Chaturvedi Mangalam.

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