Jain literature

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Jain Prayers

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Philosophy

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Major figures

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Major Sects

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Texts

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Other

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Festivals

Canonical

Origin

According to the tradition, the canonical literature originated from the first tirthankara Adinatha. It was forgotten and revived from time to time by tirthankara succeeding adinatha. The last tirthankara Mahavira's teachings was recorded in twelve sections known as anga. The last part contains the teachings of fourteen earlier works called purva. A council was formed c. 300 BCE at Patliputra for compilation of the scriptures. However the last Anga was unknown to everyone. So jain monks were sent to Bhadrabahu to retrieve it. Bhadrabahu was a sutra-kevali according to Jain tradition. Sutra-kevali are individuals who had memorised all jain scriptures and could recite them out of memory. Of the whole delegation, only Sthulabhadra, a jain monk learnt the purva, while the others found themselves incapable of receiving the knowledge. However, Bhadrabahu did not allow stutabhadra to teach the last four purva to anyone. The knowledge of ten purva were passed on heriditarily up to seven generations of the teachers before it was lost permanently. The Vallabhi council was commissioned in c. 5th century CE to write down the scriptures. The council was headed by Devarddhi. The scriptures compiled by this council forms the canonical texts of the swetambara svetambara sect. The digambara sect of Jainism share the opinion that Bhadrabahu knew the scriptures. However, according to the digambara tradition, the knowledge of the twelve anga were also lost along with the fourteen purva. Svetambara sect thus claim to have the correct but incomplete canonical literature where as texts written in a later period guides the principles of the digambara.

Svetambara

The svetambara canonical literature consists of forty-five texts. These are eleven anga, twelve upanga, ten prakrina, six chedasutra, two sutra and four mulasutra. Further, svetambara also have niyukti and other works which are added to these forty-five texts. The holy texts of svetambara thus comes to around eighty-four. There are also thirty-six nigama which serves as a supplement to agama. There are some branches within svetambara sect which do not regard all these texts as authoritative. For instance, the sthanakavasi sect regards only thirty-two of these as their holy books.

Digambara

Non-Canonical

Theological

Bhadrabahu (c. 300 BCE) is considered by the jains as last sutra-kevali (one who has memorized all the scriptures). He wrote various books known as niyukti, which are commentaries on those scriptures.[1] He also wrote Samhita, a book dealing with legal cases. Umaswati (c. 1st century CE) wrote Tattvarthadhigama-sutra which briefly describes all the basic tennets of Jainism. Siddhasena Divakara (c. 650 CE), a contemporary of Vikramaditya, wrote Nyayavatra a work on pure logic. Haribhadra Suri (c. 1088-1072 CE) wrote Yogasastra, a textbook on yoga and Adhatma Upanishad. His minor work Vitragastuti gives outlines of the Jaina doctrine in form of hyms. This was later detailed by Mallisena (c. 1292 CE) in his work Syadavadamanjari. Devendrasuri wrote Karmagrantha which discuss the theory of Karma in Jainism. Gunaratna (c. 1400 CE) gave a commentary on Haribhadra's work. Dharmasagara (c. 1573) wrote kaupaksakausi-kasahasrakirana (Sun for the owls of the false doctrine). In this work he wrote against the Digambara sect of Jainism. Lokaprakasa of Vinayavijaya and pratimasataka of Yasovijaya were written in c. 17th century CE. Lokaprakasa deals with all aspects of Jainism. Pratimasataka deals with metaphysics and logic. Yasovijaya defends idol-worshiping in this work. A recent work on Jaina theology is Jainatattvajnana written by Vijay Dharma Suri in 1917 CE. Srivarddhaeva (aka Tumbuluracarya) wrote a Kannada commentary on Tattvarthadigama-sutra. This work has 96000 verses. This work is praised in various inscriptions but it is lost. Jainendra-vyakarana of Pujyapada Devanandi and Sakatayana-vyakarana of Sakatayana are the works on grammar written in c. 9th century CE. Siddhahemacandra by Hemacandra (c. 12th century CE) is considered by F. Kielhorn as the best grammar work of the Indian middle age. Hemacandra's book Kumarapalacaritra is also noteworthy.

Narrative literature and poetry

Jaina narrative literature mainly contains stories about sixty-three prominent figures known as Salakapurusa, and people who were related to them. Some of the important works are Harivamshapurana of Jinasena (c. 8th century CE), Vikramarjuna-Vijaya (also known as Pampa-Bharata) of Kannada poet named Adi Pampa (c. 10th century CE), Pandavapurana of Shubhachandra (c. 16th century CE). Paumacariya of Vimalasuri (c. 3rd or 4th century CE), Padma-purana of Ravisena (c. 660 CE) and Ramacandra-caritrapurana (also known as Pampa-Ramayana) of Pampa II (c. 1100 CE) have the stories of the legendary figure Rama.

Drama

Daily literature

Inscriptions

Jain inscription usually starts with the words Om! Svasti! Sri.

Notes

  1. glasenapp 1999, p. 175

References

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