160 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. {May, 1906. 
He has been identified 9 one Umapati Upadhyaya, rier: of the 
Parijata-harana-nata . L. Mitra, Notices of Sans S., 
V., p. 205), but, I think, on insufficient grounds, as ee latter 
flourished under a different king, Hindupati Hariharadeva, after 
the Yavana rule(Do., V., p. 206). 
The anterior time of ‘Umapatiahars is fixed by his oe 
of Vijayasena prasasti. The poste 
His time. or r limit j is fixed by his mention in the 8 K. 
(a.D. 1206), and by the mention of hisname 
in the Gita-govinda, Sarga I, verse 4. He probably lived in the 
a 
king.! Roughly speaking, he flourished in the third quarter of 
the twelfth centur 
Of the verses quoted i in the S_K.,? I find four are taken from 
: he Deopara prasasti, viz., verse 7 of the 
His verses. sok ey (S K., Ill. 49°4, fol. 139a), 
II. 17°55, fol. 1262), verse 24, 
e23 (I 
CAH 85, fol. 1200), sid verse 30 ul 17-4, fol. 125b); while the 
familiar ‘hymn to the god a (Devendra- mauli- mandara) is 
attributed to Umapatidhara il "29° 5, fol. 16a). The verse chinte 
Brahma-siro, ne iy S.P. is ascribed to Dhoyi (No. 1161), is in 
S.K. referred to this poet probably more correctly (1V. 2°, 
fol. 1426) ; on the ak hand the verse priyayah pratyuse, which 
in the S.M. (fol. 73) is put under Umapatidhara, is ascribed in 
the S.K. to Dhoyika (II. 135°3, fol. 99b) ; and similarly Karabha- 
rabhasa, which in 8.V. is er dited to Bhallata (No. 669) is put 
under Umapatidhara in S.M. (fol. 42a), In the S.M. fol, 416, 
Karabha-dayite is credited to Umapatidhara, whils in 9.V. and 
S.P., two verses with the same initial words are found (Nos. 
(6) Jalhana’s Subhasita- muktavalz-§.M. ‘Dr. R G. Bhandarkar, Report 
on the Search for Sanskrit MSS. ir. the Bombay Presidency, 1897, pp. I- LIV). 
Samii Bla Subhasit-dvali—8.V. (Peterson’s Kdition, Bombay 
(d) Sarngadhara-paddhati—§.P, (Peterson’s Edition, B. 8. 8.) 
‘STATS FSS UT AA! | 
AUZRLA Fa a aMlAaAiad | Sarafaure 
V. 75-4, Sr, pp. 440-1 (omitted in A). 
? The verses in the 9.K. nre given below :—- 
I. 6:4, I. 11°3-4, I. 12-4, I. 182, I. 22-1, I. 26-4, I. 29°, I. sit 43°5, 
524, I. 55 3-4, 1.573, I’ 61-1, I. 67-2, 1. 724, 1 731, 1 ; Il. 85, 
163-4. II. 20-1- 
ILI, 49°3-4; IV. 22, IV. 3-4, IV. 42 1 xf. os, IV. 20°4, IV. 21°4, IV. 25°5, 
ty. a AG wD 4,1Y, 41:5, IV. 465, I IV. 52°3-5, IV. 544, ges 
» 53 4, iV 89,1 705, 1V. 72, V. 13°3, V. 161, V. 
V. 29°1, V. 613, V. 703, V. 73°8, V. 76:4. 
