The location of the original five copper plates and their ring are no longer known, but iron reproductions of the plates were created by a Bidri worker in Bīdar when the plates were brought to him by a villager from the Bechchali tālukā of the Bīdar district. Although the original plates are untraceable, the iron copies give an accurate copy of the charter which records Devasena’s donation of the village of Velpakoṇḍā in ‘favour of one Raddochha, a scholar of the four Vedas’ (Shastri 1997: 108). The inscription was issued from Vatsagulma. According to Shastri (1997: 109), this is the only known complete official grant of Devasena. Shastri (1997: 110) also argues that this plate is important because it may prove that the Vatsagulma branch of the Vākāṭakas spread into Karnataka, as the ending of the named village in the inscription may suggest.