Kanchi Sankaracharya Mutt 1817
Col.Colin Mackenzie a Scottish army officer of the East India Company surveyed South India collecting important inscriptions, palm leaf manuscripts on History and Religion He was a great orientalist. He had his Indian assistants one of whom was Babu Rao a Mahratta translator. In one of his visits he happen to visit Kanchi Sankara Mutt at Kumbakonam on 10th April 1817 which was their at that time in Kumbakonam . The pontiff was Chandrasekharendra Saraswati VI(1813-1851). A first hand account of his visit on that day as recorded by him.
" I visited the Chief priest of Sankar Achari expending four rupees on fruit to introduce myself and requested him to give me a copy of copper inscriptions he had in his Mattham but some of the Karyesthalu (Managers) of the Mattham directly denied that there were any inscriptions on copper plates being afraid of losing their original documents which they had saved through many years from the destruction of different wars. I encouraged them assuring them that I would take no originals only wanted a copy. They answered that if I assure them that only a copy was to be taken and that I would give them a recommendation to my master regarding their discontinued Jagir and obtain their restoration of any of the discontinued villages, that he would get me a particular account of Cholen, Cheran and Pandian together with that of the Raja of Bijaynagar . I accordingly gave them a recommandatory letter; then confiding in my assertion that I had come only to copy inscriptions and collect historical information he was much pleased and promised to get me a particular account of the Rajas that had ruled from the commencement of Kaliyugam he took me into his Agraharam and showed me about 125 Copper Sasanams each contained in five or six plates. He gave me a copy of two and gave me leave promising to get a particular account of the Chola Rajas together with several coins if I recommend him to my Master at Madras and got any assistance to get recover their discontinued villages".
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