This inscription is engraved across the front, one side and the back of a stone slab now preserved in the Archaeological Museum at Anurādhapura. Senarath Paranavitana recorded that the slab was said to have been discovered in the area of the Abhayagiri Vihāra in Anurādhapura. He also noted that it had been included in the list of lithic inscriptions from Nuvara-kalāviya exhibited at Anurādhapura in the Archaeological Survey of Ceylon Annual Report for 1911–12 (p. 73, no. 16). He was unable to find any other references to the slab giving further details about its provenance.  The inscription registers some donations made to a Buddhist monastery by the queen of a king called Badadasa Ḷa-Parideva. Neither the name of the monastery nor that of the queen is preserved. However, it seems that the final part of the monastery’s name may have been la, suggesting that it was not the Abhayagiri Vihara, in which case we may perhaps assume that the slab was originally situated elsewhere and brought to this vihara at a later date, possibly for some architectural purpose. As for the king’s name, Paranavitana argues that Parideva may be taken as a clerical error for or variant of Paridadeva – a combination of the personal name Pārinda and the suffix deva, which could be applied to the appellation of any royal personage. According to the chronicle, Pārinda was one of the six Tamil rulers who occupied the throne of Anurādhapura in the fifth century A.D., prior to the accession of Dhātusena. Since Ḷa in Sinhalese means ‘tender’ or ‘young’, Ḷa-Pari(da)deva can be understood as ‘Pārindadeva the Younger’, which equates to Khudda Pārinda (the lesser Pārinda), the name given in the chronicle to king Pārinda’s younger brother and successor. Hence Paranavitana attributes this inscription to Khudda Pārinda, the Tamil king who reigned from 437 to 452 (or from 498 to 513, according to Wickremasinghe’s chronology).

Metadata
Inscription ID IN03167
Title Anurādhapura Slab Inscription of Khudda-Pārinda
Alternative titles
Parent Object OB03138
Related Inscriptions
Responsibility
Author Senarath Paranavitana
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Language Sinhalese Prakrit
Reigning monarch Badadasa Ḷa-Parideva (Khudda Pārinda)
Commissioner
Topic registers some donations made to a Buddhist monastery by the queen of a king called Badadasa Ḷa-Parideva
Date:
Min 437
Max 452
Comment Basis for dating: reign of Khudda Pārinda. The inscription refers to a king called Badadasa Ḷa-Paridev. Paranavitana argues that Parideva may be taken as a clerical error for or variant of Paridadeva – a combination of the personal name Pārinda and the suffix deva, which could be applied to the appellation of any royal personage. According to the chronicle, Pārinda was one of the six Tamil rulers who occupied the throne of Anurādhapura in the fifth century A.D., prior to the accession of Dhātusena. Since Ḷa in Sinhalese means ‘tender’ or ‘young’, Ḷa-Pari(da)deva can be understood as ‘Pārindadeva the Younger’, which equates to Khudda Pārinda (the lesser Pārinda), the name given in the chronicle to king Pārinda’s younger brother and successor. Hence Paranavitana attributes this inscription to Khudda Pārinda, the Tamil king who reigned from 437 to 452 (or from 498 to 513, according to Wickremasinghe’s chronology).
Hand
Letter size 7.62 cm
Description The letters measure two to three inches (5.08 to 7.62 cm) in size. Sinhalese script that is somewhat archaic for the date of the inscription.
Layout
Campus:
Width 29.21
Height 157.48
Description 5 lines boldly engraved on the face (A), one of the sides (B) and the back (C) of a stone slab. The surface of side C has not been dressed. The lines of writing run vertically. There are 3 lines on side A and one line each on sides B and C. Side A is well preserved, except for the two letters at the beginning of line 3, which are totally illegible. Side B is considerably weathered, many letters both at the beginning and the end of the line on this side being completely effaced, and side C is also partly effaced.
Decoration
Bibliography
References Included in the list of lithic inscriptions from Nuvara-kalāviya exhibited at Anurādhapura in the Archaeological Survey of Ceylon Annual Report for 1911–12 (p. 73, no. 16). Edited and translated by Senarath Paranavitana in Epigraphia Zeylanica 4 (1934–41): 111–115, no. 13.
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