a and Cambodja_. App. IV. in _Bombay
Gazetteer_, vol. I. part 1, 1896.]
[Footnote 384: It is also possible that when the Javanese traditions
speak of Kaling they mean the Malay Peninsula. Indians in those
regions were commonly known as Kaling because they came from Kalinga
and in time the parts of the Peninsula where they were numerous were
also called Kaling.]
[Footnote 385: See for this question Pelliot in _B.E.F.E.O._ 1904, pp.
274 ff. Also Schlegel in _T'oung Pao_, 1899, p. 247, and Chavannes,
_ib_. 1904, p. 192.]
[Footnote 386: Chap. xxxix. Schiefner, p. 262.]
[Footnote 387: Though he expressly includes Camboja and Champa in
Koki, it is only right to say that he mentions Nas-gling
(=Yava-dvipa) separately in another enumeration together with Ceylon.
But if Buddhists passed in any numbers from India to Camboja and _vice
versa_, they probably appeared in Java about the same time, or rather
later.]
[Footnote 388: See Kamaha. pp. 9, 10, and Watters, _Yuan Chwang_, II.
pp. 209-214.]
[Footnote 389: They preserve to some extent the old civilization of
Madjapahit. See the article "Tengereezen" in _Encyclopaedie van
Nederlandsch-Indie._]
[Footnote 390: See Kern, _Kawi-studien Arjuna-vivaha_, I. and II.
1871. Juynboll, _Drie Boeken van het oudjavaansche Mahabharata_, 1893,
and _id. Wirataparwwa_, 1912. This last is dated Saka 918 = 996
A.D.]
[Footnote 391: Or Jayabaya.]
[Footnote 392: See _Ramayana. Oudjavaansche Heldendicht_, edited Kern,
1900, and _Wrtta Sancaya_, edited and translated by the same,
1875.]
[Footnote 393: Composed in 1613 A.D.]
[Footnote 394: Groeneveldt, p. 14.]
[Footnote 395: In the work commonly called "Nagarakretagama" (ed.
Brandes, _Verhand. Bataav. Genootschap._ LIV. 1902), but it is stated
that its real name is "Decawarnnana." See _Tijdschrift_, LVI. 1914,
p. 194.]
[Footnote 396: Or Jayakatong.]
[Footnote 397: Groeneveldt, pp. 20-34.]
[Footnote 398: Groeneveldt, pp. 34-53.]
[Footnote 399: Near Soerabaja. It is said that he married a daughter
of the king of Champa, and that the king of Madjapahit married her
sister. For the connection between the royal families of Java and
Champa at this period see Maspero in _T'oung Pao_, 1911, pp. 595 ff.,
and the references to Champa in Nagarakretagama, 15, 1, and 83, 4.]
[Footnote 400: See Raffles, chap, X, for Javanese traditions
respecting the decline and fall of Madjapahit.]
[Footnote 401: See Takakusu, _A record of t
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