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66 ; to Loharání, twelve; to Baka, twelve; to Kach, the country producing gum, and bárdrúd (river Bhader), six; to Somnát, fourteen; to Kambáya, thirty; to Asáwal, two days’ journey; to Bahrúj, thirty; to Sindán, fifty: to Súfára, six; to Tána, five. There you enter the country of Lárán, where is Jaimúr, then Malia, then Kánjí, then Darúd, where there is a great gulf, in which is Sinkaldíp, or the island of Sarandíp. In its neighbourhood is Tanjáwar, which is in ruins, and the king of that country has built another city on the shore, called Padmár; then to U′malná, ten; then to Rameshar, opposite to Sarandíp from which it is distant by water twelve parasangs. From Tanjáwar to Rameshar is forty parasangs; from Rameshar to Set Bandháí, which means the bridge of the sea, is two parasangs—and that band, or embankment, was made by Rám, son of Dasrat, as a passage to the fort of Lank. It consists of detached rock separated by the sea.