The Allahabad Prashasti, composed by Harisena, employs the Champu kavya style, which combines prose and poetry. This style was commonly used in classical Sanskrit literature to enhance the aesthetic and rhythmic quality of inscriptions.
| List-I | List-II |
|---|---|
| (A) The Pandya Kingdom | (I) Y. Subbarayalu |
| (B) Peasant State and Society in Medieval South India | (II) T.V. Mahalingam |
| (C) South Indian Polity | (III) Burton Stein |
| (D) Political Geography of the Chola Country | (IV) K.A. Nilakanta Sastri |
| List-I | List-II |
|---|---|
| (A) The Indo-Greeks | (I) A. K. Narain |
| (B) Early History of the Deccan | (II) B. N. Mukherjee |
| (C) The Rise and Fall of the Kushana Empire | (III) G. Yazdani |
| (D) The Agrarian System in Ancient India | (IV) U. N. Ghoshal |
| List-I | List-II |
|---|---|
| (A) Natyashastra | (I) Bhavabhuti |
| (B) Malati Madhava | (II) Vishakhadatta |
| (C) Mudrarakshasa | (III) Bharata |
| (D) Shishupalavadha | (IV) Magha |