Book Title: Jain Journal 1967 04
Author(s): Jain Bhawan Publication
Publisher: Jain Bhawan Publication

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Page 25
________________ 156 Darsaka. Jaina tradition16 is to the effect that Vardhamana died the same day as Canda Pradyota of Avanti. Thus "the founder of the Jaina faith must have seen Darsaka's reign (i.e., 437-413 B.C.), if it be true that both Vardhamana and Canda died about the same time." (pp. 124-125) JAIN JOURNAL This view can be easily refuted on the basis of what has already been said. on (G) H. C. Seth17 suggests 488 B.C. as the date of Mahavira's death on the basis of the Buddhist tradition, assuming 487 B.C. as the date of the Buddha's death. As he says, "The great difficulty in accepting 468 B.C. as the date for Mahavira's nirvana will be that it will place Mahavira's death several years after that of Buddha. The traditions preserved in the Buddhist Pali canon clearly tell us that Nigantha Nataputta i.e., Mahavira, died at Pava a little before Buddha18. Jacobi and Charpentier have rather lightly set aside this old Buddhist tradition." (p. 820) "The traditional chronology of the Svetambara Sect of the Jainas given in the Tapagaccha Paṭṭavali and Merutunga's Vicärasreni, which has been made familiar by European scholars like Buhler, Jacobi, and Charpentier, puts Mahavira nirvana 470 years before the Vikrama era. (pp. 817-18) "All the Jaina traditions assign 40 years of reign to Nahavana or Nahapana, whose reign therefore lasted upto 605 years (430 between 10 The Literary Remains of Dr. Bhau Daji, Ed., by Ramachandra Ghosh (Calcutta, 1880), p. 130. 17 'Mahavira nirvana and some other important dates in Ancient Indian History' in Bharata Kaumadi, Part II (Allahabad, 1947), pp. 817-838. H. C. Seth's other articles on ancient Indian chronology include: 'Buddha nirvana and some other dates in Ancient Indian Chronology', Indian Culture, Vol. 5 (1938-1939), pp. 305-317; 'Beginning of Chandragupta Maurya's Reign', Proceedings of the 3rd Indian History Congress (1939), p. 371; also republished in Journal of Indian History, Vol. 19 (1940) pp. 17-21; 'Chronology of Asokan Inscriptions', Journal of Indian History, Vol. 17, Part III. Jain Education International 18 Digha Nikaya, III, pp. 117, 209; and Majjhima Nikaya, II, pp. 243 ff. We are told here that while Buddha stayed at Samagama, the report was brought to him that his rival had died at Pava, and that the Nirgranthas, his followers, were divided by serious schisms. According to Jaina traditions also Mahavira died at Pava. (H. C. Seth). For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org

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