.18 
Kavi Raj Sliyanial Dds—On the Frithi Udj lldsd. 
[No. 1, 
hiscription IV, 
In the ninth arch of the same bridge we find an Inscription S. 13—2, 
the 13th of the bright half of Jeshtha, recording that Rawal Samar Singh 
granted a piece of land, on the bank of the river below the Lakhota Bari 
(gate) on the northern border of the Fort of Chitor, for the good of 
his mother Jaitalla Devi 
It is a pity that this Inscription is much broken, and thus cannot 
furnish any important information. Of the four figures of the year, 
the third is broken. However, so much is certain that it was executed 
fn Samar Singh’s reign; seeing the century to be 13 and the unit’s 
p’ace occupied by 2, I think the decimal place must have been taken up 
by 3, thus making up 1332; because the style of this Inscription closely 
resembles that of Inscription III, (dated 1324) and probably one and the 
same person was the author of both. 
Inscri^tioyi V. 
Found embedded in the inner yard of a palace at Chitorgarh, dated 
S. 1335, Thursday, the 5th of Baisakh Sudi—of Rawal Samar Singh’s 
time. It records the grant of land by him to a temple of S'yam Paraswa- 
nath, built by his mother Jaitalla Devi, Queen of Rawal Tej Singh. 
Inscription VI. 
The Inscription exists in a monastery adjoining the temple of Achai- 
lesvara, near Achalgarh on Mount Abu. Its date is S. 1342 (= A. D. 
1285)—and it records the erection of a golden pillar for, and the repara¬ 
tion of, the monastery by Rawal Samar Singh. 
Inscription VII. 
This Inscription is dated S. 1344 (= A. D. 1287)—Baisakh Sudi 
3rd recording a land-grant to a temple of Vaidya Nath Mahadev, when 
Rawal Samar Singh was the reigning sovereign at Chitor. The temple 
was originally built in the tank dug by Ohitrang Mori. 
There are altogether eight lines—the character is Devakshara—it is 
on a pillar called Surah bearing the figure of a cow in relief, and 
one of the Mahadeva lingam. 
I found this valuable writing on a white stone (not exactly marble) 
pillar, at the third gate from the Suraj Pol (Sun-gate), and had it 
removed to Oodeyporc, the present capital—and it lies here in the 
palace. 
