Page:Ancient India as described by Megasthenês and Arrian.djvu/161

 142 to T r p i n a 1225 ; J to the cape of P e r i- Hi u la,§ where there is the greatest emporium of trade in India, 750 miles ; to the town. in the island of P a t a 1 a mentioned ahove, 620 miles. The hill-tribes between the Indus and the lomanes are the C e s i ; the C e t r i b o n i, who hve in the woods ; then the M e g a 1 1 ee, whose king is master of five hundred elephants and an army of horse and foot of unknown strength ; the Chrysei, the Parasangee, and the A s a n g 8e,|| where tigers abound, noted for their ferocity. The force under arms con- sists of 30,000 foot, 300 elephants, and 800 horse. These are shut in by the Indus, and are surrounded by a circle of mountains and deserts mouth of the God&vari river. The town of Dandaguda or Dandagula I take to be the Dantapura of the Buddhist chronicles, which as the capital of Kalinga may with much probability be identified with R&ja Mahendri, which is only 30 miles to the north-east of Coringa. From the great similarity of the Greek F and H, I think it not improbable that the Greek name may have been Danda- pulaf which is almost the same as DAntapura. But in this case the DAnta or 'tooth-relic' of Buddha must have been enshrined in Kalinga as early as the time of Pliny, which is confirmed by the statement of the Buddhist chronicles that the *left canine tooth* of Buddha was brought to Kalinga immediately after his death, where it was enshrined by the reigning sovereign, Brahmadatta." — Cunningham, Qeog. p. 518. X [Tropina answers to Tripontari or Tirupanatara, opposite Kochin. — Ed. Ind. Ant] The distance given is measured from the mouth of the Ganges, and not from Cape Calingon. «. § This cape is a projecting point of the island of Feri- lula or Perimuda, mula or Perimuda, now called the island of Salsette, near Bombay. {I V. 1. Asmagi. The Asangee, as placed doubtfully by Lassen about Jodhpur.— Ed. Irid. Ant, Digitized by Google