<Li> below the inscription are more Hindu sages, further below is ruined fragment that probably was an anthropomorphic carving of Vishnu to explicitly link the Varaha's underlying identity, states Becker . </Li> <P> The temple was built by king Dhyana Vishnu . Cunningham and others found it in ruins with pillars broken that suggest its destruction at some point rather than natural erosion . The boar stood on . It is 13.83 feet (4.22 m) long, 11.17 feet (3.40 m) high and 5.125 feet (1.562 m) wide . It was inside a sanctum . Cunningham states that there was also a mandapa in front because of the ruins of pillars he saw . He found two carved 10 feet high pillars which were "remarkably fine specimens of Hindu decorative art". </P> <P> About 33 feet (10 m) in front of what is now the Varaha platform, there is another stone 6 feet by 3.5 feet . It is aligned with the temple alignment and set into the ground . On it is a large shell script inscription that remains undeciphered . It is probably the stone that formed the original temple's entrance . About 15 feet (4.6 m) in front of this entrance stone is the ruined leftovers of a torana (Hindu arched gateway). The gateway pillars are broken, but one of them survives and it is ornamented ("G" in the plan drawings). Cunningham searched for broken parts of the pillars, but only found a few broken statues and most of the torana pillars gone . </P> <P> Next to the Varaha temple remnants are two terraces, one to the south that is 13 feet (4.0 m) sided square, another 13.5 feet (4.1 m) by 9.25 feet (2.82 m). These were likely temples too, but they are lost . </P>

Where is the first memorial of sati dated 510 a.d found