Index. 
339 
Tamralipti, ancient port for Ceylon, 211. 
Tdtkdlika motion of a planet, 276. 
Tezpur = ancient S'onitapura, 273. 
Thesanrus epistolicus Lacrozianns, 42. 
ThiseoA Dec-tsan, in reign of, Lantslia 
characters introduced to Tibet, 6. 
Tiion-mi, son of Ann learns, the S'abda 
Vidya, 6. 
Thumkd Ooharshdhi, a kind of rupee, 57 
Thurston, Edgar, Article on East India 
Company Coinage, 52. 
Tibetan alphabet, described by Bayer, 
(1729), 46. 
Tibetan inscription deciphered by Bayer, 
(1728), 45. 
Tipperah, conquered by S'ilarai, 289. 
Tirsoolee = Trisidi, q. v. 
Tripnri, ancient capital, of Chedi dynas- 
ty, '.'42. 
Triiiu.lt' rnpee, 57. 
Tnkfatu’l qulub, N. of Persian romance, 
128. 
Turbnk invades Assam, (1506j, 280. 
Twelve, a favourite numbers for Coun- 
cillors, &c., 282. 
TJ-chan characters of Tibet, 6. 
Udayapura, the seat of the Palas of Rang- 
pur, 278. 
‘Umar, second Caliph. 143, 147. 
Umd-mahesvara-samv dda Tantra, MS. of, 
253. 
Usha, came from S'onitapura, in Assam, 
273. 
‘Usman, third Caliph 143, 144. 
Uttarottara Tantra, MS. of, 253. 
V achpa, monastery of, 316. 
Yak pat i Munja, Raja of Malaya, (1031- 
1050, V. S.), 311. 
Vajraddk tantra , MS. of, 252 
Yajrabandhiyas, name of a sect, 320. 
Vajradatta, son of Naraka, 271. 
Yaic Pala, 277 n. 
Vamsavali, a MS., narrative of the 
Koch Kings of Assam, 268. 
YanamAla, descendant of Naraka, King 
of Assam, 272. 
Varman, or Barman, a Kshattriya title 
in Assam, 274. 
Ydsandbhdshya, Comm, on Siddhdnta 
S'iromatfi, 229. 
Vasibha, ? = Vachpa, 316, 317. 
VaSishtka, curses Naraka and Kami- 
khya, 271. 
Vasciieva, did not use Gandharian 
character on his coins, 85. 
Vidagdha, king of Hastikundi, of 
Rasht-akuta family, (date 937 V. 
S.), 311. 
Vigkaha Pala, 276. 
Yigraha Pala I., 277 n. 
Vigraha Pala II., 277 n. 
Yigraha Pala III., 277 n. 
Yigraharaja, a Chahamana-raja (Harsha 
and Bijapnr inscriptions), 311. 
Vijapura, birth-place of Bhaskara, 224. 
Vijayanagara, town of Parikshit, 293. 
Yijata Sena, defeated Nany a Deva, Kar- 
nataka, of Nepal, 251. 
, conquered Ganda, Kama- 
rupa, and Kalinga, i 77. 
Vijita Naratana, succeeds Parikshit in 
Koch Hajo, 307. 
Yilrramakdla 201, note 3. 
Vikramaditya, quoted as generous, 149. 
V£ryavanta, Raja of IChairan, 289. 
Vista Simha succeeds Chandana, (1524), 
283 n. 
— , date of, 304. 
: found Koch dynasty of 
Kdmari'tpa, 285. 
, see Bisu, 285. 
Yrihatknthd, MS. of new Sanskrit transla- 
tion of, described, 254. 
Yrisiiaketu, son of Visva Simha, 286. 
"W ADDELL, Dr., identifies KarnaSuvarna, 
with Kanchannagar, 315, 326 and ff. 
‘Wartic’ = Telugu, 44. 
Wartu character of Tibet. Its resem- 
blance to Central Asian Nagari, 5, 6. 
Weber, Rev. F., description of MSS. 
sent by him to Society, 1 and if. 
Weber MSS., description of, 1 and 
ff. Age of, 8. 
Wileord’s account of Rnngamatf, 328. 
Well’s plan of Fort William, 111. 
Wells, Lt., in charge of construction 
of Fort William, 106-8. 
White blood in a Brahman, 280 n. 
Wilkins, David, 1714, compiles transla- 
tions of the Lord’s Prayer, 42. 
Wilson, C. R., Article on the Topography 
of old Fort William, 104 and ff. 
Xaca, ’ an Indian reformer, (?) S'akya 
Muni, 43. 
Y, biannnlate, form of, 8. 
Y, tridentate, form of 7, 8. 
Yogini Tantra gives a history of Kama- 
rupa, 268 note. 
Yusaf Malik, a friend of Malik Moham- 
mad, 128, 155. 
Zafarabad, mint town of Mughal Em- 
perors, 264. 
ZiegenbalgJ correspondence with La 
Croze, 43. 
‘Ziglesic,’ a South Indian language, 44. 
ZlYAUD-DfN ‘Ibrat, author, 128. 
Zu’l-qarnain, title of Alexander the 
Great, 145 note. 
