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JAINA BIBLIOGRAPHY
533
Foot Notes :
P. 115. Kuna Pandya, staunch Jain. Some Chālukya, Rāșțraküța, Kadamba and Hoysala kings, patrons of Jainism.
P. 128. Term Pallichchandam denoting land granted to Jain and Bauddha temples.
383 (iii)
Trav. Arch. Ser., Vol. 3, Part 1--Trivandrum, 1922.
P. 3. Aiyai, a female ascetic of the Jain or Bauddha creed figuring in the work Silappadigaram.
Guņavirakkurav-Adigal, a Jain teacher.
383 (iv)
Trav. Arch. Ser., Vol IV,-Trivandrum, 1923-24.
Pp. 146-148. Jain temple at Chitral.
384
Annual Report of the Archaeological Department, Cochin State for the year 1110 M.E.--- (1934-1935 A, D.).
Ernakulam (Cochin) 1936. Supplement--The Parasurām significance.
legend and
its
P. 6. Brāhmaṇas verses Kshatriyas. The seeds of dissension between the two prominent communities were sown in the Vedic period-it was most acute at the time when Jainism and Buddhism sprang up and brought into existence two powerful organisations and it continued till the second century after Christ.
385 (i)
Annual Progress Report of the Archaeological Department, Jammu and Kashmir State, for the Vikrama year 1974-(A. D. 1917-18).
P. 7. Brass image of Jina (two photographs).
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