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Reimagining the Sātavāhana Queen Nāgaṇṇikā
Author Collett, Alice
Source Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies=JIABS
Volumev.41
Date2018
Pages329 - 358
PublisherPeeters Publishers
Publisher Url http://www.peeters-leuven.be/
LocationLeuven, Belgium [魯汶, 比利時]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
AbstractNāneghāṭ is one of five old mountain passes across the Western Ghats that linked ports on the west coast of India to inland. At the pass is a cave complex within which Middle Indic inscriptions can be found. The longest of these, covering two walls in the largest cave, provides evidence of an early Sātavāhana queen, named Nāgaṇṇikā. The unique features of the site have attracted significant scholarly attention, beginning at the time of colonial archaeologists and epigraphists. The questions raised by the first researchers, which have continued to shape the basis of study of the site, arose from a colonial paradigm that assigns to material evidence the role of corroborating (religious) texts. The inscription, however, appears to record Nāgaṇṇikā’s sponsorship and performance of Vedic rituals and therefore provided difficult to marry with interpretive strategies underlined by a privileging of religious texts. In this article, I survey past scholarship on the inscription, and highlight the ways in which focus on one interpretive paradigm led to one set of questions being repeatedly asked in relation to the inscription, at the expense of equally valid alternative questions. In the second part of the article, I engage the range of interpretable data, drawing on archaeology, particularly landscape archaeology, numismatics, and comparative epigraphy – evaluating the inscription qua inscription – to assess the nature and character of the queen who features so centrally at the site, and I conclude with a reassessment of the textual evidence in which I raise questions as to the nature of smṛti texts that were evolving during this period.
Table of contentsThe Inscription 331
Past Scholarship 334
1.Georg Bühler 334
2. Dineshchandra Sircar 336
3.Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi 337
4. S. Sankaranarayanan 338
An Imbricated Approach 341
Textual Tradition 349
Conclusion 354
Abbreviations 355
Bibliography 355
ISSN0193600X (P); 25070347 (E)
DOI10.2143/JIABS.41.0.3285746
Hits78
Created date2021.03.14



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