Book Title: Mahavira Jain Vidyalay Suvarna Mahotsav Granth Part 1
Author(s): Mahavir Jain Vidyalaya Mumbai
Publisher: Mahavir Jain Vidyalay
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Glimpses of Jainism Through Archaeology In Uttar Pradesh
M. L. NIGAM
THE historicity of Jainism in the modern State of Uttar Pradesh is
shrouded in a long mysterious past. Pārsvanatha, an immediate predecessor of Vardhamana Mahāvīra and a real historical personage, appeared in Banaras, two and a half centuries earlier than his (last) successor. Although born as a prince of King Asvasena of Banaras, Pārsvanatha, the twenty-third Tirthankara, preferred a life of complete renunciation and purity. He sponsored non-injury (Ahimsa), non-lying (Satya), non-stealing (Asteya) and non-possession (Aparigraha) as four vows to which Mahavira, the great Jina, made an addition by putting forward non-adultery (Brahmacarya) as the fifth one to be strictly observed by every householder in the society. The date of Pärévanátha, who seems to have left a well-formed organization as a legacy to Mahavira, may roughly be assigned somewhere in the eighth century B.C.
Jain Education International
Several archaeological discoveries at Mathura and its vicinity have shown that Jainism was highly venerated there in the early. centuries of Christian era, and even earlier. The facts revealed by the architectural and sculptural remains have further been confirmed by epigraphic evidences. The flourishing state of Jainism, gathered from the inscriptional data, may very well be imagined by studying the various sections known as gana, kula and sakha which
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