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JAINA BIBLIOGRAPHY
P. 397. Disturbances between Jains and orthodox Hindus in connection with Jain processions.
235
VAIDYA, C. V. Epic India; or, India as described in the Mahābhārata and the Rāmāyaṇa. Bombay, 1907.
P. 347. Idol worship the outcome of Buddhism and Jainism. P. 359. Jainism borrowed two planks from the orthodox religion of India. Viz., fasting and abstention from slaughter.
P. 369. The only philosophical discourses in the Rāmāyaṇa throws light on the state of orthodox feeling towards Jainism and Buddhism, about 1st cent. B.C.
P. 377. The Ramayana refutes the doctrines of Jainism and Buddhism not by argument but by downright condemnation.
P. 447. Buddhism and Jainism followed by a resuscitation of the Karmakāṇḍa and Vedic sacrifices.
P. 505. The ahimsă doctrine was a part and parcel of Hinduism long before it was taken up by the Jains and the Buddhists.
236
WHISH, C. W. India. London, 1907.
P. 15. Rise of Buddhism and Jainism may be dated in about 500-450 B.C.
237
LEHMANN, EDv. Buddha. Kobenhavn, 1907.
Pp. 38 42. The Jain sect-Their relation and reaction to Buddha.
238
MEEBOLD, ALFRED. Indien [India]. Munchen, 1908.
The work, written in German, in eight chapters, describes India in all its different aspects, religious, philosophical and even topographical. Contains Pp. 1-322, and is illustrated.