Source: TW
kaumAra inscription of the Iranic lord shrIdhara-varman
The shaka lord or judge (daNDanAyaka) shrIdhara-varman’s Sanskrit inscription commemorating the excavation of a well indicates his kaumAra affinities (the orthography is styled after the original). The inscription was discovered in 1921 CE by the famous RD Banerji and believed to be coeval with the kuShANa-s. If this claim is true, then shrIdharavarman would have been a daNDanAyaka under the kuShANa-s. However, the date remains uncertain, and he could have very well been an earlier shaka chief. It should be noted that that the shaka azilises-I (ayiliSha) from around 57-35 BCE was already minting kaumAra coins with skanda and skanda and vishAkha.
siddham [|] bhagavatas tridasha-gaNa-senApater ajitasenasya svAmi-mahAsena-mahA(kumArasya) [divya]vIryyArjjitavija(ya) dharmma-vijayinA shaka-nandaputreNa mahA-daNDanAyakena shakena shrIdharavarmmaNA va[rShasaha]srAya svarAjyAbhi-vrR^iddhi-kare vaijayike saṁvatsare trayodasha(me) shrAvaNa-bahulasya dashamI-pUrvvakam etad divasaṁ…
Success! [This well has been excavated] by the mahA-daNDanAyaka shaka shrIdharavarman, the son of shaka nanda, the righteous conqueror, … the divine Lord mahAsena, the Commander of the Celestial Hosts, whose army has never been defeated and who, by his celestial prowess, attained victories…on this day, the 10th day of the dark fortnight of shrAvaNa in the victorious thirteenth year, expanding his dominion for a thousand years …