The position has leash letters, measuring 'ma-la-a,' and the end component has not been plant. "It looks as if all the trey inscriptions are personal traducement. Palaeographically, the inscriptions may be dated to the archetypal century B.C." say the tierce specialists.
For the introductory abstraction, in the change Cauvery delta, Tamil Script letters inscribed on pots were constitute in an urn burial tract in an meaningless village in Tamil Nadu, says Dr. Rajan. "The insight conveys, in vindicated damage, that interred dying goods also carried inscribed pots. Also, it shows literacy had reached surface villages in the archetypal century B.C. itself. The traducement inscribed on the pots were, perhaps, the names of the dead persons whose bodies were kept in the urns."
Others who examined the potsherds were N. Alagappan, straits of the Department of History, Annamalai Lincoln; S. Kannan, P. Kalaiselvan and E. Manamaran.
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