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Hi DVdm, noted that you have deleted my edit [1]. I have read your comment. I have added two more sources as per your guidance. I would say this is very commonly known by southern state ppl in Andhra as well as TN. Still if you have some query kindly mention here. Thanks
The Satavahana coins are inscribed in Prakrit and Tamil, this is the current expert opinion of scholars such as Iravatham Mahadevan and C. Somasundara Rao (A Telugu professor of history and archaeology) (Mahadevan 2020 Early Tamil epigraphy, 2nd edition, p. 237-243, and C. Somasundara Rao 1997, a note on bilingual legends on Satavahana coins pp. 17-21). Sircar outdated conclusions have been thoroughly debunked by the other two references. The script used is Tamil Brahmi and the inscriptions follow Tamil Brahmi grammatical and phonological conventions perfectly (the term 'Dravidian script' is not recognised in mainstream epigraphy). Please read the other two references before making any edits and discuss as appropriate.Metta79 (talk) 12:54, 12 April 2023 (UTC)
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Thank You Anandwiki.ind (talk) 15:01, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
It is important to understand that the Rēnāti Chōla inscriptions in Kadapa district (575 CE) are the earliest "long" inscriptions in Telugu, but aren't actually the "first ever writings".
As of now, we have several individual Telugu words dated till 100 CE and many personal and place names in Sanskrit/Prakrit texts till c.200 BCE. All these must be considered for understanding the antiquity of Telugu language.
Besides revered linguistics and academicians like FC Southworth, K Mahadeva Sastri mentioned the dating of Old Telugu as c.200 BCE.
And of course, a language is always older than its writings.
Source: Historical Grammar of Telugu by Korada Mahadeva Sastri; Early Telugu Inscriptions by Budharaju Radhakrishna. Anandwiki.ind (talk) 15:33, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
Hojtfh 152.58.79.166 (talk) 06:03, 8 April 2024 (UTC)