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Jaiswal Jains are one of the Jain communities of northern India. They are mainly located in the Gwalior/Agra region.[1] The term "Jaiswal" indicated as being residents of a place named Jayas or Jais.
Some authors have identified Jais with Jais in Raebareli district. A legend identifies it as Jaisalmer.[2][3] However there are documented mentions of Jaiswal Jains prior to the settlement of Jaisalmer. The famous Dubkund Jain inscription of 1088 AD is the earliest mention of the Jayas town.[4] The Apabhraṃśa Jain poet Lakshmana composed the Jinadatta Charitra in sam. 1275 and Anuvaya Rayana Payiiva in sam. 1313,[5][6] both at Tihuangiri near Bayana.[7] Thus the place Jayas must have been in the vicinity of Gwalior region. Several of the cave temples on the sides of the Gwalior Fort hill have inscriptions mentioning that they were constructed by Jaiswals.[8] Some of the patrons of poet Raidhu in Gwalior were Jaiswal.[9]
Prominent Jaiswal Jains
- Poet Bulakhichand, author of Vachankosha in sam. 1707[10]
- Dr. Nemichandra Shastri Jyotishacharya 1922-1974
- Ravindra Jain, poet and music director
External links
See also
References
- ↑ Digambar Jain Directory, Thakurds Bhagavandas Javeri, 1914
- ↑ V.A. Sangave, Jaina Community A social survey, 1980, p. 108
- ↑ Vachankosha, Kavivar Bulakhichand, Kasturchand Kasliwal, 1983, p. 108-114
- ↑ The Candellas of Jejākabhukti By R. K. Dikshit, Published 1977, Abhinav Publication
- ↑ A Comprehensive History of India Volume 4, Issue 2, 1957, p. 486
- ↑ Tirthankar Mahavir Aur Unki Acharya Parampara, V.4, Nemichandra Shastri, 1974, p. 171
- ↑ Jaiswal Jain Itihas, Ranjit Jain, Pub. Jaiswal Jain Samaj Gwalior, 1988
- ↑ Arvind K. Singh and Navneek K. Jain, Inscriptions of Gwalior, Vol1, p. 193
- ↑ BHAṬṬĀRAKAS AND DIGAMBARA MONASTIC LINEAGES OF FIFTEENTH CENTURY GWALIOR: GLIMPSES FROM RAÏDHŪ'S WRITINGS, EVA DE CLERCQ, , Journal of Asian History, Vol. 45, No. 1/2 (2011), pp. 63-83
- ↑ Kavivar Bulakhichand, Kasturchand Kasliwal, 1983, p. 3-115