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Kalambuya
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Kalambuyā (Kalambuka) A place visited by Titthayara Mahāvira.1 It lay somewhere in the eastern part of the ancient country of Amga(1). 1. AvaN. 482, AvaCu. I. p. 290, KalpDh. AvaM. p. 281.
P, 106, Kalpv. p. 166, Vis. 1936, 2. SBM. D. 360.
Kalāda A goldsmith living in Teyalipura. Bhaddă(18) was his wife. They had a beautiful daughter named Pottilā.
1. Jna. 96, VipA. p. 88.
Kalāya First chapter of the second sub-section of the twenty-first section of Viyāhapaņņatti.1
1. Bha. 688.
A noble lady.
Kalāvai (Kalāvatī)
1. Ava, p. 28.
1. Kalimga (Kalinga) An Āriya country and its people. Kamcanapura was its capital.? A god predicted its destruction by flood. Kokkāsa, a carpenter of Sopāraga, visited Kalimga in an air-craft, Karakamdu reigned there.5 It is identified with the region comprising modern Orissa to the south of Vaitarasi and the seacoast southward as far as Vizagapattam. 1. SutSi. p. 123.
4. AvaCu. 1. p. 541. 2. Praj. 37, VyaM. 10.450, UttCu.p. 178. 5. AvaBh. 208, Utt. 18. 46, UttN. p. 299. 3. OghNBh. 30.
6. LAI. p. 292.
2. Kalimga One of the hundred sons of Usabha(1).1
1. KalpDh. p. 151, Kalpv. 236.
Kalimda (Kalinda) An Ariya community. Same as Kalamda.
1. Praj. 37, BrhBh. 3264.
1. Kavila (Kapila) A Vāsudeva(1) of the eastern half of the Bharaha(2) region in Dhāyaisamda. Campā(2) was his capital. He had an exchange of conch-blowing with Kanha(1), Vāsudeva of the southern half of the Bharaha(2) region in Jambūdiva. He removed king Paumaņābha(3) of Avarakamkā(1) from his throne and gave the kingdom to his son.
1. Jna. 125, SthA. p. 524, KalpDh. p. 35, Kalps. p. 33.
2. Kavila One of the hundred sons of Usabha(1).
1. KalpDh. D. 152, KalpV. p. 236.
3. Kavila Founder of a heretical school of philosophy known as Sānkhya. He was a prince who had renounced the world and become a disciple of
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