Parsva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Jainism


Main Jain prayer
Navakar Mantra

Timeline

Jain great vows
Ahimsa · Asteya
Brahmacharya · Satya
Nirvana · Aparigraha
Anekantavada

Key concepts
Kevala Jñāna · Cosmology
Samsara · Karma
Dharma · Mokṣa · Reincarnation
Swadhyay

Major figures
The 24 Tirthankaras
Lord Rishabh to Mahavira
Acharyas · Ganadhars
Siddhasen Divakar · Haribhadra

Practices and attainment
Four Stages of Enlightenment
Paramis · Meditation

Jainism by region
India · Western

Sects of Jainism
Svetambara · Digambara
Terapanthi · Early schools
Sthanakvasi · Bisapantha
Deravasi

Texts
Kalpasutra
Agama (text) · Tattvartha Sutra
Sanmatti Prakaran

List of topics
Portal: Jainism

This box: view  talk  edit
Idol of Lord Parshvanath at Bada Gaon, Khekra, Baghpat, Uttar Pradesh, India
Idol of Lord Parshvanath at Bada Gaon, Khekra, Baghpat, Uttar Pradesh, India

Parshva or Parshvanatha (pārśvá-nātha, occasionally spelled Parshvanath or Parswanath) was the twenty-third Tirthankara (fordmaker) in Jainism. fl. ca. in the 7th Century BCE, traditionally 877-777 BCE[1] [2]. He is the earliest Jain leader generally accepted as a historical figure.[3]

According to the Jain tradition he died 250 years before the death of Mahavira, the last Tirthankara.[3] The chronology accepted by most Jains (Svetambaras) places Mahavira's death in 527 BCE.[4] Parshva was the son of king Ashvasena and queen Vama of Varanasi. He renounced the world and became an ascetic when he was 30 years old.[5] He achieved Nirvana atop Sammet Sikhar. He was called purisādāṇīya ("beloved of men"), a name which shows that he must have been a genial personality.[6] Still in our times he is most popular among the Jains.[7]

There is a mention of four prominent leaders of the order of Lord Parshvanath:

  1. Gandhara Shubhdatta (Shumbh)
  2. Arya Haridatta
  3. Acharya Samudra Suri
  4. Arya Keshi Shraman

In addition, Parshvanath had ten Ganadhars, or disciples. He also has 108 names.

Arya Keshi Shraman is believed to have been born about 166 to 250 years after the death of Bhagawan Parshvanath. He met Ganadhara Gautam Swami, the main disciple of Lord Mahavira. Their discussion about the apparent differences between the teachings of the two Tirthankaras is recorded in Jain texts.

Contents

[edit] Iconography

Lord Parshvanath is always represented with the hood of a snake shading his head. The Yaksha Dharanendra and the Yakshi Padmavati are often shown flanking him. This is because of a famous legend which can be roughly translated to this:

Parshvanath was walking one day when he saw an old man next to a fire. With a special type of knowledge called Avdhignan he could tell that a pair of snakes was in one of the logs in the fire. He quickly warned the man that he was burning the snakes, but instead of acting rapidly to save them, the man became angry at Parshvanath and denied the presence of the snakes. Parshavanath pulled out the right log and put it out, then gently split it, revealing two badly burned snakes. He recited the Navkar Mantra, a prayer, for them before they died. It was said that the snakes were reincarnated into the two previously mentioned Yakshas, Dharanendra and Padmavati.

In Jain canonical literature, Parshvanatha is represented in 'padmasana' (lotus) posture – both palms and feet, with auspicious lotus marks on them, placed upward. He has blue-black complexion – the color of the cosmos. The seven-hooded serpent Shesh – umbrella-like unfurling its hoods over the deity, represented elements of the earth and the ocean and has hence a similar body colour. Parshvanatha has been represented as wearing a gem-studded crown and other ornaments. He has a golden throne as a seat and a rich canopy above.

[edit] Famous Temples of Lord Parshvanath

Lord Parshvanath has a lot of temples all over India. He has at least 108 different idols (names/ roop) in which he is worshipped. Some of the famous ones are

[edit] Gallery

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Parshvanatha". Encyclopædia Britannica Encyclopædia Britannica Online. (2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-22. 
  2. ^ Bowker, John (2000). "Parsva". The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved on 2007-10-22. 
  3. ^ a b Jarl Charpentier: The History of the Jains, in: The Cambridge History of India, vol. 1, Cambridge 1922, p. 153; A.M. Ghatage: Jainism, in: The Age of Imperial Unity, ed. R.C. Majumdar/A.D. Pusalker, Bombay 1951, p. 411-412; Shantaram Bhalchandra Deo: History of Jaina Monachism, Poona 1956, p. 59-60.
  4. ^ Kristi L. Wiley: Historical Dictionary of Jainism, Lanham 2004, p. 134.
  5. ^ Ghatage p. 411, Deo p. 60.
  6. ^ Ghatage p. 411.
  7. ^ Walther Schubring: Jinismus, in: Die Religionen Indiens, vol. 3, Stuttgart 1964, p. 220.
Languages