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met with. Each gachha has its own Sri Pujya; the Tapa gachha has twelve or thirteen gaddis or seats of their Sri Pujyas--the principal of whom lives in the Jayapur territories; and the Kharatara gachha has three Sri Pujyas.
pp. 244-286; Asiat. Annual Register, Vol. X (1808). pp. 609-614; Major Delamaine, Trans. R. Asiat. Soc., Vol. I. pp. 413-348; Dr. Buchanan Hamilton, in ib. pp. 523527 and 531-540; Lieut-Col. Francklin, 'Description of the Temple of Parsvanatha at Samet Sikhar' in ib. pp. 527-530, and Researches on the Tenets and Doctrines of the Jeynes and Boodhists (1827), pp. 92-100, and 180-207; Lieut-Col. Tod, 'On the Religious Establishments of Mewar'-Trans. R. As. Soc., Vol. II. pp. 270-325; H. H. Wilson, Religious Sects of the Hindus'-Asiat. Resear., Vol. XVII. pp. 239294, or Works, Vol. I. pp. 276-346; Lient-Col. Miles, 'On the Jainas of Gujarat and Marwar ---Trans. R. As. Soc., Vol. III. pp. 335-371; Stevenson, Kalpa Sutra and Nava Tatva; Briggs, Cities of Gujarat, pp. 325-356; Erskine, Trans. Bombay Literary Soc., Vol. I. pp. 202-203, and Vol. III. pp. 494-537; Coleman, Mythology of the Hindus, pp. 220-227; Moor, Hindu Pantheon, pp. 235-241 and 249-257, and Hindu Infanticide, pp. 174-189; Lieut-Col. Wilks, Historical Sketches in the History of Mysore (1810), Vol. I. pp. 88, 89 and 507-514; L'Abbe Dubois (Paris 1823), Moeurs des Peuples de l'Inde, tom. I. pp. 138, 139, et. tom. II. pp. 499-521; Ward, View of the History etc. of the Hindus, 3rd ed. (1817), Vol. II. pp. 243-269; Dr. F. Buchanan, Journey through Mysore, etc., Vol. II, pp. 74, 75 and 80-82, Vol. III, pp. 73-74, 132-134 and 410-412; Heber, Narrative of a Journey etc. (ed. 1828), Vol. I. p. 292, Vol. II, pp. 22, 94-97 and 157; Forbes, Ras Mala, Vol. II. pp. 236, 237.
. 202-202 Gujarar,
Hindu lus: Pp. 2
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