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JAINA BIBLIOGRAPHY
491
Miscellaneous Inscriptions :
Two Jain records at Varakodu, dated in 1425 and 1431, indicate that the pillars on which thay are inscribed once belonged to a Jain temple. An inscription at Hagalhalli opening with a prayer for the prosperity of the Jina-sāsana.
Manuscript Examined :
P. 44. Mahisūra-doregala-vamśabali, a Kannada poem, written by an unknown Jain author, living in the early part of the 19th cent.
Illustrations in the Report :
Plate 13. Jina figure, architrave of a doorway, and pillar in ruined bastis at Basti Haskote.
380 (xviii)
Report of the Arch. Survey of Mysore, 1921-Bangalore, 1922. Works Transcribed :
P. 5. Indrabhyudaya, a champu by Raghunātha Sūsi. Sastrasāra-samuchchaya by Māghanandi (in part)--Padarthasāra by Māghanandi (in part).
Epigraphy :
Pp. 18-29. A set of copper plates received from the Tirumukudlu, Narsipur taluq, relating to the Gangas. It registers a grant in 963 A D. by king Mārasimha to a scholar named Munjärya alias Vädighanghalabhatta. A full account of the Ganga dynasty is given in the record.
Manuscripts Examined :
P. 33. Sastrasāra Samuchchaya, a Kannada prose work on Jain philosophy by Māghanandi, a Jain teacher of the middle of the 13th cent. Vaidyanighanţusāra, a Sanskrit work bearing on medicine in the form of a lexicon by Chikkana pandita, a Jain author. He was patronised by the Mysore king Chikka-Deva-Raja-Odeyar (1672-1704).
380 (xix)
Report of the Arch. Survey of Mysore, 1922— Bangalore, 1922.
Pp. 5 6 Khaņdagiri : Of the many caves in the place, two appear to be Buddhist and three Jain. On the top of the hill is a Jina temple dedicated to Śăntinātha.
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