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Jaina BIBLIOGRAPHY
847
Tribhuvanamalla Vikramaditya VI from Jayantipur. It is dated the Chālukya Vikrama year 48-corresponding to A.D. 1124.
This Jain epitaph introduces a distinguished Jain teacher named Prabhāchandra Traividya Bhattaraka who was the Superintendent of the holy place Virapura and belonged to Maduva-gana of Yāpaniya-Sangha.
Further, it states that the eminent three hundred Mahājanas of the agrahāra Sédimba constructed a temple for Sāntinātha Tirthankara and made gifts for the worship and other rituals of the deity.
Appendix. P. 30. No. 76. 4 Sedam.
This inscription refers itself to the Western Chālukya king Bhulokamalla Sonieśvara III (A.D. 1126-38). It extols the Jain teacher Prabhachandra Traividya Bhattāraka who was a distinguished scholar and successful disputant and the Chief Barmadeva who played a leading part in the foundation of the temple of Sāntinātha. See-No. 75 above.
812
D. C. SIRCAR.-Dharwar plates of the time of Simhana, (E. I. Vol. XXXIV, Part I, Pp. 35 & 40.) Delhi, 1961.
In this inscription two house-sites were given to some Brahmanas ; in the boundaries mention is made of a Jain temple and a Jainalayapura.
In the village of Herūru situated on the western bank of the river Venna in Beluvala-desa ; the first house site was situated, to the north of the western Jain temple, the second house site lay to the north of Jainalayapura.
The river Venna is modern Bennihalla. Herūru is near Hubli in the Dharwar District of Mysore State.
Text : line 33-paschima- Jinalayād-uttarataḥ.
line 36-Finālaya-purād-uttarataḥ.
813
D. C. SIRCAR and M. R. MAJUMDAR—Fragmentary Inscription from Dholka, (EI. Vol. XXXV, Part II for 1963 ; Pp. 89-94). Delhi, 1963.
This inscription was discovered on the back side of a slab of black granite stone, the front side of which contains an image of Vishņu in high relief. The
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