with his Queen, at
Sannati (Kanaganahalli Stupa), 1st-3rd century CE. inscribed on the relief identify king
Ashoka as the subject matter. Kanaganahalli is an excavation site managed by the
Archaeological Survey of India.
Excavation during 1994 to 1998 • During these Kanaganahalli excavations, the remains of a massive
stupa, many brick
Chaitya-griha structures and other memorial stupas were brought to light. • Architectural fragments of the stupa were found, including carved veneer slabs, railings, pillars, capitals, stone
padas (footprints of the
Buddha), four images of the
Buddha, and sculpted
yakshas (protective nature spirits). • The sculptured panels depicts various
Jataka tales of Lord
Buddha and the portraits of several
Shatavahana kings.
Inscriptions In addition to one long
inscription, 145 short inscriptions were discovered, dating from between the 1st century BCE to 1st century CE ("
common era"). One of the most important discoveries was the relief-portrait of
Maurya emperor
Ashoka, identified by an inscription that says, "Raya Asoko". Written in
brahmi script, "Raya Asoko" reads as "King Ashoka."
Excavation during 2000 to 2002 • During the excavations, the bare and ruined remnants of a number of brick structures connected by paved and sheltered passages were found. This includes part of a possible monastic complex to the north-west of the main
stupa. • Lead coins bearing the names of
Shatavahana kings like Satakarni, Pulumavi and Yajnasri were discovered. File:Kanaganahalli relief.jpg|Kanaganahalli aniconic relief of the empty throne of the Buddha File:Kanaganahalli dharmachakra relief.jpg|Kanaganahalli dharmachakra relief File:Kanaganahalli inscribed panel portraying Asoka (perspective).jpg|Kanaganahalli inscribed panel portraying Asoka Conservation restarted in 2022.
Satavahana inscriptions The oldest
Satavahana inscription is the one found on a slab of the upper drum (
medhi) of the Kanaganahalli stupa mentioning "year 16" of Vasisthiputra Sri Chimuka Satavahana's reign, which can be dated from ca. 110 BCE. On another stone slab at Kanaganahalli, the king is possibly shown together with a
Nagaraja, and the inscription reads: ==International Buddhist Centre==