No. I. DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF PLATES. ... Plan of the Great Temple at Buddha-Gaya, with the Bodhi- V. Pedestal of Statue in the Great Temple, with Niches from VI. Pavement Slabs from the granite floor of the Great Temple, VII. The Buddha-pad, or Prints of Buddha's feet, in front of the VIII. Corner and middle Pillars of the Sandstone Railings-in the Samâdh of Guru Chait Mall, marked B and C in Plate IV. IX. Sculptured Basreliefs on the Buddhist Railings. The letters XIII. Inscriptions at Nâlanda, Râjgir, Giryek, and Kurkihâr. In- scriptions Nos. 1 and 2 contain the name of Nâlanda. XIV. Map of Râjgir and Giryek, showing the site of the ancient No. 1 is the Buddhist profession of faith, found at 10 feet from the top of the Great Stupa. No. 2 gives the characters in use when the Stupa was building. No. 4 records a gift by Hari Gupta. No. 5, in much later characters, gives the Buddhist profession XXXVI. Map of Lâlkot, the Hindu Citadel of Delhi... XXXVII. Hindu Pillar, and mason's marks on pillars... ... INTRODUCTION. THE study of Indian antiquities received its first impulse from SIR WILLIAM JONES, who in 1784 founded the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Amongst the first members were Warren Hastings, the ablest of our Indian rulers, and Charles Wilkins, who was the first Englishman to acquire a knowledge of Sanskrit, and who cut with his own hands. the first Devanâgari and Bengâli types. During a residence. of little more than ten years, Sir William Jones opened the treasury of Sanskrit literature to the world by the translation of Sakuntala and the institutes of Manu. His annual discourses to the Society showed the wide grasp of his mind; and the list of works which he drew up is so comprehensive that the whole of his scheme of translations has not even yet been completed by the separate labours of many successors. His first work was to establish a systematic and uniform system of orthography for the transcription of Oriental languages, which, with a very few modifications, has since been generally adopted. This was followed by several essays-On Musical Modes-On the Origin of the Game of Chess, which he traced to India--and On the Lunar Year of the Hindus and their Chronology. In the last paper he made the identification of Chandra-Gupta with Sandrakottos, which for many years was the sole firm ground in the quicksands of Indian history. At the same time he suggested that Palibothra, or Pâtaliputra, the capital of Sandrakottos, must be Patna, as he found that the Sôn River, which joins the Ganges only a few miles above Patna, was also named Hiranyabahu, or the "golden-armed," an appellation which at once re-called the Erranoboas of Arrian. The early death of Jones in 1794, which seemed at first to threaten the prosperity of the newly established Society, |