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In 1920, Jayaswal and Banerji stated that this inscription cannot be placed before the 2nd-century, and may be a bit later. [17] On palaeographic grounds and considering it with information in other ancient Indian inscriptions, Sircar places this in the second half of the 1st-century BCE, or possibly in the first decades of the 1st-century CE. [18]
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The lower floor has seven entrances in the middle wing whereas the upper floor has nine columns. The upper portion of the central wing has relief images depicting the victory march of a king. Many of the cells have carved dwara pala images; [14] some of them are disfigured. The area that connects the central wing with right and left wings have ...
Hathi is a fictional character created by Rudyard Kipling for the Mowgli stories collected in The Jungle Book (1894) and The Second Jungle Book (1895). Hathi is an elephant that lives in the Seeoni jungle. [1] Kipling named him after hāthī (हाथी), the Hindi word for "elephant".
The three fragments are each incomplete, but studied together. They are believed to have been displaced because the Mughal emperor Akbar during his seize of Chittorgarh camped at Nagari, built some facilities by breaking and reusing old structures, a legacy that gave the location its name "Hathi-bada" or "elephant stable". The part discovered ...
Hathi is an elephant character in Kipling's The Jungle Book. Hathi may also refer to: Thornycroft Hathi, a 4x4 military lorry of 1924; HathiTrust, a shared digital repository, including the Google Book Search project; Haathi Parvat, a mountain peak in the Himalayas; Elephant in Hindi
Elephant with howdah. A howdah or houdah (Hindi: हौदा, romanized: haudā, derived from the Arabic هودج hawdaj which means 'bed carried by a camel') also known as hathi howdah (हाथी हौदा hāthī haudā), is a carriage which is positioned on the back of an elephant, or occasionally some other animal such as a camel, used most often in the past to carry wealthy people ...
A directly photographed image: Exposure mode: Auto exposure: White balance: Auto white balance: Focal length in 35 mm film: 26 mm: Scene capture type: Standard: Speed unit: Kilometers per hour: Speed of GPS receiver: 0.061389726021516: Reference for direction of image: True direction: Direction of image: 26.941858291269: Reference for bearing ...