Shiladitya of "Mo-la-po" (identified as Malwa) was a 6th-century king of India, known only from the writings of the 7th-century Chinese traveler Xuanzang.
[4][5] Shiladitya built a highly ornamental Buddhist monastery (vihara) beside his palace, and installed the images of the seven Buddhas in it.
Every year, he organized an assembly called Moksha mahaparishad, inviting priests and making generous donations to them.
Xuanzang states that Dhruva-bhata ("Tu-lo-po-po-ta"), the contemporary Maitraka king of Vallabhi ("Fa-la-pi"), was a nephew of Shiladitya.
[1] Historian Radha Kumud Mukherjee identified Shiladitya as a son of the Aulikara king Yashodharman.