The Mountain Temple inscription makes an early mention of Hindu and Jain temple architecture, where its shape is described to be like a mountain and accompanied with an assembly hall (sabha). The inscription's wording and arrangement, state Luders and Janert, closely resembles the Mora Well inscription, now in Mathura museum. Both describe a donation of a stone temple, halls and slabs; however, the Mora Well inscription is more detailed and mentions pratima. The Rajula in line 3 of the Mountain Temple inscription is likely the Northern Satraps Great Satrap Rajuvula, found in Mathura lion capital.[2]
The Mountain Temple inscription lacks a date. The similar Mora Well Inscription is dated to the early decades of the 1st-century CE and is related to early Vaishnavism: the Mora Well inscription mentions stone shrines dedicated to five Vrishni heroes.[3]
Inscription
The discovered inscription is incomplete, in not quite correct Sanskrit.[2] It reads:[1]
1. . . . uvulasya putrasya mahaksatrapasya so ...
2. . . . ti parvato prasade(or do) sabha silapata ...
3. . . . taviryo rane rajulas ca pi[ta] ...
4. . . . sasyedam arca ...
. . . of the mahaksatrapasyaSo(dasa), son of (Raj)uvula . . . a temple like a mountain, an assembly hall, stone slabs... whose heroism in battle, and (his) father Rajula . . . this . . . of his is adored.
^ abc
Heinrich Lüders and Klaus Ludwig Janert
(1961), Mathurā inscriptions, Göttingen : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, OCLC717966622, pages 203-204, 154, image on page 318