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JAINA BIBLIOGRAPHY
62. Seated Jina, 3rd century A.D.
63. Image of Aristanemi dated in the year 18.
64. Standing Jina dated in the year 9.
66. Fragment of a Kušana pedestal dated in the year 47 of Kaniska.
Text figures:
22. Jina image dedicated by Kumāramitā and dated in the year 15.
23. Jina dedicated by Sthira and from about the same time as text fig. 22.
24. Jina image found at Kankali Tila.
1404
S. K. AIYANGAR-A History of Tirupati. Vol. I, Madras, 19:0.
P. 86. Current popular worship towards Buddhism and Jainism during the time of Alvars of Tirupati.
1405
Amritlal Maganlal SHAH-Prasasti Samgraha (Sanskrit text), Ahemdabad.
Contains Pralastis, collected from about 1,500 Jain Mss.
Jain Education International
1305
1406
Adris BANERJI-Traces of Jainism in Bengal. (J.U.P.H.S. Vol. 23, 1950) Lucknow, 1950.
No. 164-168.
Pp. 164-65. Eastern India, the Prachyadesa of the Purāņas, Kikața equivalent to later Magadha. The people of Prachyadeśa were Aryanised by Jains (An. Bh. Ori. R. Inst. Vol. XII, p. 110). Bihar was devided into Anga, Magadha and Kosala; these included districts of Monghyr, Bhagalpur, Patna, Gorakhpur, Gonda, Deoriya and Balliya; with portions of Ghazipur. The term Bengal includes, West Bengal, Eastern Pakistan with the exception of modern Cooch-Behar, and HillTippera. In ancient days they were known as Pundra Radha, Suhma and Vanga. Modern Assam, Chittagong, Cooch-Bihar and Hill Tippera were probably the Kirata-deśa. The district of Tippera and Commila were known as Samatata. The country now known as Orissa was originally included in the three countries known as Udra, Utkala, and Kalinga.
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