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JAINA BIBLIOGRAPHY
389
(ii)
Annual Report of Archaeological Survey of India, 1908-09, Pt. I : Administrative Calcutta, 1911.
P. 3. Acquisitions :
22 Jain images, Madras Museum.
P. 6. Jain remains at the Tirupparangunram hill, now believed to represent a linga-Alagaramalai, once Occupied by the Jains. Mention in an inscription of the Jain teacher Ajjanandi discovered on the Tirupparangunram hill. Jain remains at Kuppalnattam and Kongar. Puliyangulam, Madura district, and at Vedal, North Arcot district.
389 (iii)
Report of Archaeological Survey of India, 1908-09,
Pt. 2.-Calcutta, 1911
Pp. 22-23. Hemakutam Jain temple at Vijayanagar.
Pp. 100-101, 108. Hindu and Jain legends in connection with Osia--The Jain temple dedicated to Mahāvira.
Pp. 118-119. Jain sculptures and inscriptions discovered on the hills at Tirupparangunram and Alagaramalai. An epitaph in the Topkhānā at Jalor refers to a temple of Pārsvanātha under the name Kenara-Vihāra.
389 (iv) Report of Archaeological Survey of India, 1909-10, P. I: AdministrativeCalcutta, 1911,
P. 17. Photographs : No. 150. Image of a Jain Tirthankara, Mathura Museum.
Nos. 210--212. Jain temple at Basti, Halebid.
389 (v) Report of Archaeological Survey of India, 1910-11, Pt. I: AdministrativeCalcutta, 1911.
P. 6. Ādināh masjid at Rohtak, originally a Jain temple but converted into a mosque by Ala-ud-din.
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