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JAINA BIBLIOGRAPHY
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D. C. SIRCAR-History Section, Presidential Address. A.1.0.C. 19th Ses. 1957, Delhi, 1959.
P. 174. The relation between the Airas of the Krishna-Guntur region and of Orissa cannot be satisfactorily determined. It is possible that the establishment of Aira rule in the heart of the Andhra country was the result of the southern campaigns of Khāravela and these southern Airas were over-thrown by the Later Satavāhanas who came to the area from outside.
1453
D. C. Sircar-Presidential Address, History Section. (Proc. and Trans. AICC, XIXth Session); Delbi, 1959.
Part I.
Pp. 174-175. King Haritiputra Manasada ruled over the Krishna-Guntur region about the middle of the second century A. D. with the title Mahārāja. The dynastic name of the king is given as Aira in an inscription discovered in the Guntur District which connects this King with the rulers of the Aira or ChediMahāmeghavähana family. The Aira rule in the heart of the Andhra country was the result of one of the southern campaigns of Khäravela.
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SWAMI SANKARANANDA-The Last Days of Mohenjo Daro. Calcutta, 1959.
P. 140. The culture of the Indus valley found its way in the Eastern India. This Eastern Zone of the Indus cultural colonization gave birth to the greatest of the religious preachers of the world, the Buddha. It is here in this zone also arose Mahavira, the founder of the Jain religion.
1455
R. C. MAJUMDAR-The Classical Accounts of India, Calcutta, 1960. (being English translations of the accounts, left by Diodorus, Herodotus, Megasthenes, Arrian, Strabo, Quintus, Siculus, Justin, Plutarch, Frontinus, Nearchus, Apollonius, Pliny, Ptolemy, Aelian and others with Maps, editorial notes, comments, analysis and Introduction).
P. XX. Sramaņas include both Buddhists and Jainas.
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