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- Permanent Link:
- https://digital.soas.ac.uk/AA00001694/00002
Notes
- Abstract:
- Chronicle of the line of succession from Mahāvīra’s disciple Sudharman, No. 1, to Jñāna, No. 61, continued by a line of succession of the Loṅkāgaccha from No. 62, Bhāṇā, to No. 69, Jīva Ṛṣi, who was succeeded by Varasiṃha, the likely author or teacher of the author of this paṭṭāvali. It is said that at the time of Varasiṃha the “Nāgaurī Loṅkā Gaccha” was established as a separate group from the “Gujarātī Loṅkā Gaccha,” the line represented by Jīva, who was initiated in Surata, and Varasiṃha. The paṭṭāvali also records that the paṭṭadhara No. 66, Saravo, once was a minister of Akbar. The bhāsa, or poem, was composed by Jinadatta Ṛṣi, who may have been a disciple of Vrasiṃha. It records the names of a father Dhanamala and a mother Raṅgade, belonging to the Vāgareca Kula, of an unnamed monk, maybe of Jinadatta himself.
- General Note:
- Language: Old Gujarati
- General Note:
- Author of the paṭṭāvalī: maybe Vaḍa Varasiṃha or Jinadatta Ṛṣi
- General Note:
- Author of the Bhāsa: Jinadatta Ṛṣi
- General Note:
- Compare the almost identical extended nineteenth century version: Manuscript No.: 43330, Ācārya Śrī Kailāsasāgarasūri Jñānamandira Kobā
- General Note:
- Source document from the collection of the Baroda Oriental Institute, manuscript number 2083, on the campus of the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda
- General Note:
- Baroda Oriental Institute Ms. No. 2083 includes a final unrelated further section
- General Note:
- Loṅkāgaccha is sometimes transliterated as Luṅkāgaccha; it is also known as the Lumpaka sect
- Funding:
- Funded in part by a British Academy / Leverhulme Trust grant (grant number SG152131) entitled "Literary Heritage of the Aniconic Jaina Tradition"
- Funding:
- Also funded in part by Dr. Peter Flügel and SOAS University of London
- General Note:
- "Literary Heritage of the Aniconic Jaina Tradition" collects, transliterates and publishes important, yet unstudied manuscripts pertaining to the history, doctrine and religious culture of the Lonkagaccha Jaina traditions in India. A comprehensive survey of the heritage of this historically influential tradition is an urgent, yet to be accomplished task. The Lonkagaccha is an aniconic religious tradition that emerged and flourished in the 15th and 16th centuries. It had a significant impact on the religious and social history of Jainism, but declined from the 18th century onward. Today it is on the verge of extinction, while the aniconic Sthanakavasi and Terapanth traditions, which branched off the Lonkagaccha lineages in the 17th and 18th centuries, continue to thrive.
- General Note:
- VIAF (name authority) : Sheth, Kalpana K. : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/305275650
- General Note:
- VIAF (name authority) : Flügel, Peter 1959- : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/5224239
- General Note:
- Transcribed by Kalpana Sheth; and, edited by Peter Flügel
Record Information
- Source Institution:
- SOAS University of London
- Rights Management:
- This item is licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivative License. This license allows others to download this work and share them with others as long as they mention the author and link back to the author, but they can’t change them in any way or use them commercially.
- Resource Identifier:
- Ms. No. 2083 ( Baroda Oriental Institute )
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