
Jain literature (Sanskrit: जैन साहित्य) refers to the literature of the Jain religion. It is a vast and ancient literary tradition, which was initially transmitted orally. The oldest surviving material is contained in the canonical Jain Agamas, which are written in Ardhamagadhi, a Prakrit (Middle-Indo Aryan) language. Various commentaries were written on these canonical texts by later Jain monks. Later works were also written in other languages, like Sanskrit and Maharashtri Prakrit.

Jain literature is primarily divided between the canons of the Digambara and Śvētāmbara orders. These two main sects of Jainism do not always agree on which texts should be considered authoritative.
More recent Jain literature has also been written in other languages, like Marathi, Tamil, Rajasthani, Dhundari, Marwari, Hindi, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam and more recently in English.
Beliefs
Jains believe their religion is eternal, and the teachings of the first tīrthaṅkara, Ṛṣabhanātha, existed millions of years ago.
It states that the tīrthaṅkaras taught in divine preaching halls called samavasarana and were heard by gods, ascetics, and laypersons. These divine discourses were called śrutajñāna or empirical knowledge. They comprised eleven angas and fourteen purvas, The discourses are remembered and transmitted by the ganadharas or chief disciples, and is composed of twelve angas (parts, limbs). It is symbolically represented by a tree with twelve branches. The spoken scriptural language is believed to be Magadhi Prakrit by Śvetāmbara Jains, and a form of divine sound or sonic resonance by Digambaras.
According to the Jain tradition, the divine śrutajñāna or empirical knowledge of a tīrthaṅkara is then converted into a sutta or scripture by disciples, and from such suttas emerge the formal canons. The suttas are grouped into "twelve-limbed baskets," which are transmitted orally by the disciples. In every universal cycle of Jain cosmology, twenty-four tīrthaṅkaras appear, and so do the Jain scriptures for that cycle.
Twelve agamas (angas)
Initially, the canonical scriptures were transmitted through an oral tradition and consisted of teachings of historical Jain leaders like Mahavira codified into various collections.Gautama and other Gandhars (the chief disciples of Mahavira) are said to have compiled the original sacred scriptures which were divided into twelve Angas or parts. They are referred to as the eleven Angas and the fourteen Pūrvas, since the twelfth Anga comprises fourteen Pūrvas. These scriptures are said to have contained the most comprehensive and accurate description of every branch of Jain learning. The Jain Agamas and their commentaries were composed mainly in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit as well as in Maharashtri Prakrit.
While some authors date the composition of the Jain Agamas starting from the 6th century BCE, some western scholars, such as Ian Whicher and David Carpenter, argue that the earliest portions of Jain canonical works were composed around the 4th or 3rd century BCE. According to Johannes Bronkhorst it is extremely difficult to determine the age of the Jain Agamas, however:
Mainly on linguistic grounds, it has been argued that the Ācārāṅga Sūtra, the Sūtrakṛtāṅga Sūtra, and the Uttarādhyayana Sūtra are among the oldest texts in the canon. This does not guarantee that they actually date from the time of Mahāvīra, nor even from the centuries immediately following his death, nor does it guarantee that all parts of these texts were composed simultaneously.
Elsewhere, Bronkhorst states that the Sūtrakṛtāṅga "dates from the 2nd century BCE at the very earliest," based on how it references the Buddhist theory of momentariness, which is a later scholastic development.
During the reign of Chandragupta Maurya (c. 324 or 321 – c. 297 BCE), Āchārya Bhadrabahu (c. 367 – c. 298 BCE), said to have been the last knower of the complete Jain agamas, was the head of Jain community. At this time, a long famine caused a crisis in the community, who found it difficult to keep the entire Jain canon committed to memory. Bhadrabahu decided to travel south to Karnataka with his adherents and Sthulabhadra, another Jain leader remained behind. The famine decimated the Jain community, leading to the loss of many canonical texts. According to Śvētāmbara ("white-clad") tradition, the agamas were collected on the basis of the collective memory of the ascetics in the first council of Pataliputra under the stewardship of Sthulibhadra in around to 463–367 BCE. During the council, eleven scriptures called Angas were compiled and the remnant of fourteen purvas were written down in a 12th Anga. Another council was later organised in 2nd-century BCE in Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves, Kalinga (now in Odisha) during the reign of Kharavela.
The Śvētāmbara order considers these Jain Agamas as canonical works and sees them as being based on an authentic oral tradition. They consider their collection to represent a continuous tradition, though they accept that their collection is also incomplete because of a lost Anga text and four lost Purva texts.
However, these texts were rejected by the Digambara (lit. "sky-clad", i.e. naked) order, which hold that Āchārya Bhutabali (1st century CE) was the last ascetic who had partial knowledge of the original canon. According to Digambaras, the Purvas and the original Agamas of Gautama were lost during the Mauryan period crisis and famine. This Digambara stance on the loss of the Agamas is one of the disagreements that led to the main schism in Jainism. Digambara masters proceeded to create new scriptures which contained the knowledge of the doctrine that had survived in their community. As such, Digambaras have a different set of canonical scriptures. According to von Glasenapp, the Digambara texts partially agree with the enumerations and works of older Śvētāmbara texts, but in many cases there are also major differences between the texts of the two major Jain traditions.
The Śvētāmbara Siddhāntha
In 453 or 466 CE, the Śvētāmbara order held another council at Vallabhi. The Śvētāmbaras recompiled the Agamas and recorded them as written manuscripts under the leadership of Acharya Shraman Devardhigani along with other 500 Jain scholars. The existing Śvētāmbara canons are based on the Vallabhi council texts.
From the 15th century onwards, various Śvetāmbara subsects began to disagree on the composition of the canon. Mūrtipūjaks ("idol-worshippers") accept 45 texts, while the Sthānakavāsins and Terāpanthins only accept 32.
List of works
The canons (Siddhāntha) of the Śvētāmbaras are generally composed of the following texts:
- Twelve Angās (limbs)
- Āyāraṃga (Jain Prakrit; Sanskrit: Ācāranga, meaning: 'On monastic conduct')
- Sūyagaḍa (Sūtrakṛtāṅga, 'On heretical systems and views')
- Ṭhāṇaṃga (Sthānāṅga, 'On different points [of the teaching]')
- Samavāyaṃga (Samavāyāṅga, 'On "rising numerical groups"')
- Viyāha-pannatti / Bhagavaī (Vyākhyā-prajñapti or Bhagavatī, 'Exposition of explanations' or 'the holy one')
- Nāyā-dhamma-kahāo (Jñāta-dharmakathānga, 'Parables and religious stories')
- Uvāsaga-dasāo (Upāsaka-daśāḥ,'Ten chapters on the Jain lay follower')
- Aṇuttarovavāiya-dasāo (Antakṛd-daśāḥ, 'Ten chapters on those who put an end to rebirth in this very life')
- Anuttaraupapātikadaśāh (Anuttaropapātika-daśāḥ, 'Ten chapters on those who were reborn in the uppermost heavens')
- Paṇha-vāgaraṇa (Praśna-vyākaraṇa, 'Questions and explanations')
- Vivāga-suya (Vipākaśruta,'Bad or good results of deeds performed')
- Diṭhīvāya (Dṛṣṭivāda) - this text was lost after 1000 years of Mahavira.
- Twelve Upāṅgas (auxiliary limbs)
- Uvavāiya-sutta (Sanskrit: Aupapātika-sūtra,'Places of rebirth')
- Rāya-paseṇaijja or Rāyapaseṇiya (Rāja-praśnīya, 'Questions of the king')
- Jīvājīvābhigama (Jīvājīvābhigama, 'Classification of animate and inanimate entities')
- Pannavaṇā (Prajñāpanā, 'Enunciation on topics of philosophy and ethics')
- Sūriya-pannatti (Sūrya-prajñapti, 'Exposition on the sun')
- Jambūdvīpa-pannatti (Jambūdvīpa-prajñapti, 'Exposition on the Jambū continent and the Jain universe')
- Canda-pannatti (Candra-prajñapti, 'Exposition on the moon and the Jain universe')
- Nirayāvaliyāo or Kappiya (Narakāvalikā, 'Series of stories on characters reborn in hells')
- Kappāvaḍaṃsiāo (Kalpāvataṃsikāḥ, 'Series of stories on characters reborn in the kalpa heavens')
- Pupphiāo (Puṣpikāḥ, 'Flowers' refers to one of the stories')
- Puppha-cūliāo (Puṣpa-cūlikāḥ, 'The nun Puṣpacūlā')
- Vaṇhi-dasāo (Vṛṣṇi-daśāh, 'Stories on characters from the legendary dynasty known as Andhaka-Vṛṣṇi')
- Six Chedasūtras (Texts relating to the conduct and behaviour of monks and nuns)
- Āyāra-dasāo (Sanskrit: Ācāradaśāh, 'Ten [chapters] about monastic conduct', chapter 8 is the famed Kalpa-sūtra.)
- Bihā Kappa (Bṛhat Kalpa, '[Great] Religious code')
- Vavahāra (Vyavahāra, 'Procedure')
- Nisīha (Niśītha, 'Interdictions')
- Jīya-kappa (Jīta-kalpa, Customary rules), only accepted as canonical by Mūrti-pūjaks
- Mahā-nisīha (Mahā-niśītha, Large Niśītha), only accepted as canonical by Mūrti-pūjaks
- Four Mūlasūtras ('Fundamental texts' which are foundational works studied by new monastics)
- Dasaveyāliya-sutta (Sanskrit: Daśavaikālika-sūtra), this is memorized by all new Jain mendicants
- Uttarajjhayaṇa-sutta (Uttarādhyayana-sūtra)
- Āvassaya-sutta (Āvaśyaka-sūtra)
- Piṇḍa-nijjutti and Ogha-nijjutti (Piṇḍa-niryukti and Ogha-niryukti), only accepted as canonical by Mūrti-pūjaks
- Two Cūlikasūtras ("appendixes")
- Nandī-sūtra – discusses the five types of knowledge
- Anuyogadvāra-sūtra – a technical treatise on analytical methods, discusses Anekantavada
Miscellaneous collections
To reach the number 45, Mūrtipūjak Śvētāmbara canons contain a "Miscellaneous" collection of supplementary texts, called the Paiṇṇaya suttas (Sanskrit: Prakīrnaka sūtras, "Miscellaneous"). This section varies in number depending on the individual sub-sect (from 10 texts to over 20). They also often included extra works (often of disputed authorship) named "supernumerary Prakīrṇakas". The Paiṇṇaya texts are generally not considered to have the same kind of authority as the other works in the canon. Most of these works are in Jaina Māhārāṣṭrī Prakrit, unlike the other Śvetāmbara scriptures which tend to be in Ardhamāgadhī. They are therefore most likely later works than the Aṅgas and Upāṅgas.
Mūrtipūjak Jain canons will generally accept 10 Paiṇṇayas as canonical, but there is widespread disagreement on which 10 scriptures are given canonical status. The most widely accepted list of ten scriptures are the following:
- Cau-saraṇa (Sanskrit: Catuḥśaraṇa, The 'four refuges')
- Āura-paccakkhāṇa (Ātura-pratyākhyāna, 'Sick man's renunciation')
- Bhatta-parinnā (Bhakta-parijñā, 'Renunciation of food')
- Saṃthāraga (Saṃstāraka, 'Straw bed')
- Tandula-veyāliya (Taṇḍula-vaicārika, 'Reflection on rice grains')
- Canda-vejjhaya (Candravedhyaka, 'Hitting the mark')
- Devinda-tthaya (Devendra-stava, 'Praise of the kings of gods')
- Gaṇi-vijjā (Gaṇi-vidyā, 'A Gaṇi's knowledge')
- Mahā-paccakkhāṇa (Mahā-pratyākhyāna, 'Great renunciation')
- Vīra-tthava (Vīra-stava, 'Great renunciation')
The Digambara Siddhāntha
According to the Digambara tradition, the original scriptures had been lost by about the 2nd century CE. Āchārya Bhutabali is considered the last ascetic who had some partial knowledge of the original canon. Digambara tradition holds that Āchārya Dharasena (1st century CE), guided Āchārya Pushpadanta and Āchārya Bhutabali to write what remained of the lost teachings down into palm-leaf scriptures. These two Āchāryas wrote the Ṣaṭkhaṅḍāgama (Six Part Scripture), which is held to be one of the oldest Digambara texts. They are dated to between the 2nd to 3rd century CE. Around the same time, Āchārya Gunadhar wrote Kaşāyapāhuda (Treatise on the Passions). These two texts are the two main Digambara Agamas.
The Digambara canon of scriptures includes these two main texts, three commentaries on the main texts, and four (later) Anuyogas (expositions), consisting of more than 20 texts.
The great commentator Virasena wrote two commentary texts on the Ṣaṭkhaṅḍāgama, the Dhaval‑tika on the first five volumes and Maha‑dhaval‑tika on the sixth volume of the Ṣaṭkhaṅḍāgama, around 780 CE. Virasena and his disciple, Jinasena, also wrote a commentary on the Kaşāyapāhuda, known as Jaya‑dhavala‑tika.
There is no agreement on the canonical Anuyogas ("Expositions"). The Anuyogas were written between the 2nd and the 11th centuries CE, either in Jaina Śaurasenī Prakrit or in Sanskrit.
The expositions (Anuyogas) are divided into four literary categories:
- The 'first' (Prathamānuyoga) category contains various works such as Jain versions of the Rāmāyaṇa (like the 7th-century Padma-purāṇa by Raviṣeṇa) and Mahābhārata (like Jinasena's 8th century Harivaṃśa-purāṇa), as well as 'Jain universal histories' (like Jinasena's 8th-century Ādi-purāṇa).
- The 'calculation' (Karaṇānuyoga) expositions are mainly works on Jain cosmology (such as Tiloya-paṇṇatti of Yati Vṛṣabha, dating from the 6th to 7th century) and karma (for example, Nemicandra's Gommaṭa-sāra). The Gommatsāra of Nemichandra (fl. 10th century) is one of the most important Digambara works and provides a detailed summary of Digambara doctrine.
- The 'behaviour' (Caraṇānuyoga) expositions are texts about proper behaviour, such as Vaṭṭakera's Mūlācāra (on monastic conduct, 2nd century) and the Ratnakaraṇḍaka-Śrāvakācāra by Samantabhadra (5th-century) which focuses on the ethics of a layperson. Works in this category also treat the purity of the soul, such as the work of Kundakunda like the Samaya-sāra, the Pancastikayasara, and Niyamasara. These works by Kundakunda (2nd century CE or later) are highly revered and have been historically influential.
- The 'substance' (Dravyānuyoga) exposition includes texts about ontology of the universe and self. Umāsvāmin's comprehensive Tattvārtha-sūtra is the standard work on ontology and Pūjyapāda's (464–524 CE) Sarvārthasiddhi is one of the most influential Digambara commentaries on the Tattvārtha. This collection also includes various works on epistemology and reasoning, such as Samantabhadra's Āpta-mīmāṃsā and the works of Akalaṅka (720–780 CE), such as his commentary on the Apta-mīmāṃsā and his Nyāya-viniścaya.
Post-Canonical literature
Doctrinal and philosophical works
There are various later Jain works that are considered post-canonical, that is to say, they were written after the closure of the Jain canons, though the different canons were closed at different historical eras, and so this category is ambiguous.
Thus, Umasvāti's (c. between 2nd-century and 5th-century CE) Tattvarthasūtra ("On the Nature of Reality") is included in the Digambara canon, but not in the Śvētāmbara canons (though they do consider the work authoritative). Indeed, the Tattvarthasūtra is considered the authoritative Jain philosophy text by all traditions of Jainism. It has the same importance in Jainism as Vedanta Sūtras and Yogasūtras have in Hinduism.
Other non-canonical works include various texts attributed to Bhadrabahu (c. 300 BCE) which are called the Niryuktis and Samhitas.
According to Winternitz, after the 8th century or so, Svetambara Jain writers, who had previously worked in Prakrit, began to use Sanskrit. The Digambaras also adopted Sanskrit somewhat earlier. The earliest Jain works in Sanskrit include the writings of Siddhasēna Divākara (c. 650 CE), who wrote the Sanmatitarka ('The Logic of the True Doctrine') is the first major Jain work on logic written in Sanskrit.
Other later works and writers include:
- Jinabhadra (6th–7th century) – author of Avasyaksutra (Jain tenets) Visesanavati and Visesavasyakabhasya (Commentary on Jain essentials).
- Mallavadin (8th century) – author of Nayacakra and Dvadasaranayacakra (Encyclopedia of Philosophy) which discusses the schools of Indian philosophy.
- Haribhadra-sūri (c 8th century) is an important Svetambara scholar who wrote commentaries on the Agamas. He also wrote the Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya, a key Jain text on Yoga which compares the Yoga systems of Buddhists, Hindus and Jains. Gunaratna (c. 1400 CE) wrote a commentary on Haribhadra's work.
- Prabhacandra (8th–9th century) – Jain philosopher, composed a 106-Sutra Tattvarthasutra and exhaustive commentaries on two key works on Jain Nyaya, Prameyakamalamartanda, based on Manikyanandi's Parikshamukham and Nyayakumudacandra on Akalanka's Laghiyastraya.
- Abhayadeva (1057–1135 CE) – author of Vadamahrnava (Ocean of Discussions) which is a 2,500 verse tika (Commentary) of Sanmartika and a great treatise on logic.
- Hemachandra (c. 1088 – c. 1172 CE) wrote the Yogaśāstra, a textbook on yoga and Adhyatma Upanishad. His minor work Anyayogavyvaccheda gives outlines of the Jaina doctrine in form of hymns. This was later detailed by Mallisena (c. 1292 CE) in his work Syadavadamanjari.
- Vadideva (11th century) – He was a senior contemporary of Hemacandra and is said to have authored Paramananayatattavalokalankara and its voluminous commentary syadvadaratnakara that establishes the supremacy of doctrine of Syādvāda.
- There are also other important commentators on the Agamas, including Abhayadeva-sūri (c. 11th century) and Malayagiri (c. the 12th century).
- Vidyanandi (11th century) – Jain philosopher, composed the brilliant commentary on Acarya Umasvami's Tattvarthasutra, known as Tattvarthashlokavartika.
- Devendrasuri wrote the Karmagrantha which is an exposition of the Jain theory of Karma.
- Yaśovijaya (1624–1688) was a Jain scholar of Navya-Nyāya and wrote Vrttis (commentaries) on most of the earlier Jain Nyāya works by Samantabhadra, Akalanka, Manikyanandi, Vidyānandi, Prabhācandra and others in the then-prevalent Navya-Nyāya style. Yaśovijaya has to his credit a prolific literary output – more than 100 books in Sanskrit, Prakrit, Gujarati and Rajasthani. He is also famous for Jnanasara (essence of knowledge) and Adhayatmasara (essence of spirituality).
- The Lokaprakasa of Vinayavijaya was written in the 17th century CE.
- Srivarddhaeva (aka Tumbuluracarya) wrote a Kannada commentary on Tattvarthadigama-sutra.
- Atmasiddhi Shastra is a spiritual treatise in verse, composed in Gujarati by the nineteenth century Jain saint, philosopher poet Shrimad Rajchandraji (1867–1901) which comprises 142 verses explaining the fundamental philosophical truths about the soul and its liberation. It propounds six fundamental truth on soul which are also known as Satapada (six steps).
- The Saman Suttam is a compilation of ancient texts and doctrines recognised by all Jain sects, assembled primarily by Jinendra Varni and then examined and approved by monks of different sects and other scholars in 1974.
Grammar
Jainendra Vyākaraṇa of Acharya Pujyapada and Śākaṭāyana-vyākaraṇa of Śākaṭāyana (also called Pālyakīrti) are both works on grammar written in c. 9th century CE.
Pañcagranthi by Ācārya Buddhisāgarasūri (10th century) in poetic form, complemented with auto-commentary.Siddha-Hema-Śabdānuśāsana by Acharya Hemachandra (c. 12th century CE) is considered by F. Kielhorn as the best grammar work of the Indian middle ages. Hemacandra's book Kumarapalacaritra is also noteworthy. Malayagiri, a contemporary to Hemachandra, also authored a Śabdānuśāsana, accompanied with an auto-commentary.
Narrative literature and poetry
Jaina narrative literature mainly contains stories about sixty-three prominent figures known as Salakapurusa, and people who were related to them. Some of the important works are Harivamshapurana of Jinasena (c. 8th century CE), Vikramarjuna-Vijaya (also known as Pampa-Bharata) of Kannada poet named Adi Pampa (c. 10th century CE), Pandavapurana of (c. 16th century CE).
Mathematics
Jain literature covered multiple topics of mathematics around 150 CE including the theory of numbers, arithmetical operations, geometry, operations with fractions, simple equations, cubic equations, bi-quadric equations, permutations, combinations and logarithms.
Languages
Jains literature exists mainly in Jain Prakrit, Sanskrit, Marathi, Tamil, Rajasthani, Dhundari, Marwari, Hindi, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Telugu and more recently in English.
Jains have contributed to India's classical and popular literature. For example, almost all early Kannada literature and many Tamil works were written by Jains. Some of the oldest known books in Hindi and Gujarati were written by Jain scholars.[citation needed]
The first autobiography in the ancestor of Hindi, Braj Bhasha, is called Ardhakathānaka and was written by a Jain, Banarasidasa, an ardent follower of Acarya Kundakunda who lived in Agra. Many Tamil classics are written by Jains or with Jain beliefs and values as the core subject. Practically all the known texts in the Apabhramsha language are Jain works.[citation needed]
The oldest Jain literature is in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit and the Jain Prakrit (the Jain Agamas, Agama-Tulya, the Siddhanta texts, etc.). Many classical texts are in Sanskrit (Tattvartha Sutra, Puranas, Kosh, Sravakacara, mathematics, Nighantus etc.). "Abhidhana Rajendra Kosha" written by Acharya Rajendrasuri, is only one available Jain encyclodaedic dictionary to understand the technical Jain terms in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit and other languages, with specific reference to Jain literature.[citation needed]
Jain literature was written in Apabhraṃśa (Kahas, rasas, and grammars), Standard Hindi (Chhahadhala, Moksh Marg Prakashak, and others), Tamil (Nālaṭiyār, Civaka Cintamani, Valayapathi, and others), and Kannada (Vaddaradhane and various other texts). Jain versions of the Ramayana and Mahabharata are found in Sanskrit, the Prakrits, Apabhraṃśa and Kannada.[citation needed]
Jain Prakrit is a term loosely used for the language of the Jain Agamas (canonical texts). The books of Jainism were written in the popular vernacular dialects (as opposed to Sanskrit), and therefore encompass a number of related dialects. Chief among these is Ardha Magadhi, which due to its extensive use has also come to be identified as the definitive form of Prakrit. Other dialects include versions of Maharashtri and Sauraseni.
Influence on Indian literature
Parts of the Sangam literature in Tamil are attributed to Jains. The authenticity and interpolations are controversial because it presents Hindu ideas. Some scholars state that the Jain portions were added about or after the 8th century CE, and are not ancient. Tamil Jain texts such as the Cīvaka Cintāmaṇi and Nālaṭiyār are credited to Digambara Jain authors. These texts have seen interpolations and revisions. For example, it is generally accepted now that the Jain nun Kanti inserted a 445-verse poem into Cīvaka Cintāmaṇi in the 12th century. The Tamil Jain literature, according to Dundas, has been "lovingly studied and commented upon for centuries by Hindus as well as Jains". The themes of two of the Tamil epics, including the Silapadikkaram, have an embedded influence of Jainism.
Jain scholars also contributed to Kannada literature. The Digambara Jain texts in Karnataka are unusual in having been written under the patronage of kings and regional aristocrats. They describe warrior violence and martial valor as equivalent to a "fully committed Jain ascetic", setting aside Jainism's absolute non-violence.
Jain manuscript libraries called bhandaras inside Jain temples are the oldest surviving in India. Jain libraries, including the Śvētāmbara collections at Patan, Gujarat and Jaiselmer, Rajasthan, and the Digambara collections in Karnataka temples, have a large number of well-preserved manuscripts. These include Jain literature and Hindu and Buddhist texts. Almost all have been dated to about, or after, the 11th century CE. The largest and most valuable libraries are found in the Thar Desert, hidden in the underground vaults of Jain temples. These collections have witnessed insect damage, and only a small portion have been published and studied by scholars.
List of Jain texts
Digambara texts
- Shatkhandagama — Acharya Pushpadant, Acharya Bhutabali
- Samaysar — Acharya Kundkund
- Niyamasara — Acharya Kundkund
- Pravachansara — Acharya Kundkund
- Ashtapahud — Acharya Kundkund
- Panchastikaya — Acharya Kundkund
- Rayansara — Acharya Kundkund
- Dash Bhakti — Acharya Kundkund
- Varsanuvekkha — Acharya Kundkund
- Tattvartha Sutra — Acharya Umaswami
- Aptamimansa — Acharya Samantabhadra
- Swayambhu Stotra — Acharya Samantabhadra
- Ratnakaranda Sravakachar — Acharya Samantabhadra
- Stuti Vidya — Acharya Samantabhadra
- Yuktyanushasana — Acharya Samantabhadra
- Tattvasara — Acharya Devsena
- Aradhana Saar — Acharya Devsen
- Aalap Paddhati — Acharya Devsen
- Darshansara — Acharya Devsena
- Bhavasangrah — Acharya Devsen
- Laghu Nayachakra — Acharya Devsen
- Ishtopadesh — Acharya Pujyapad (Devanandi)
- Samadhi Tantra — Acharya Pujyapada (Devanandi)
- Sarvarthasiddhi — Acharya Pujyapad (Devanandi)
- Vaidyaka Shastra — Acharya Pujyapada (Devanandi)
- Siddhipriya Stotra — Acharya Pujyapad (Devanandi)
- Jainendra Vyakaran — Acharya Pujyapada (Devanandi)
- Paramatma Prakash — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Yogasara — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Naukar Shravakacharya — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Tattvartha Tika — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Amritashiti — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Subhashit Tantra — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Adhyatma Sandoha — Acharya Yogindu Dev
- Sanmati Sutra — Acharya Siddhasena Divakar
- Kalyan Mandir — Acharya Siddhasen Diwakar
- Ashtashati — Acharya Akalankadeva
- Laghiyastraya — Acharya Akalankadeva
- Nyayavinischaya Savrtti — Acharya Akalankadeva
- Siddhivinischaya Savrtti — Acharya Akalankadeva
- Praman Sangrah Savritti — Acharya Akalankdev
- Tattvartha Rajavartika — Acharya Akalankadeva
- Harivansh Purana — Acharya Jinsen (first)
- Adi Purana — Acharya Jinsen
- Uttarpuran — Acharya Gunbhadra
- Aatmanushasan — Acharya Gunbhadra
- Ashtasahastri — Acharya Vidyananda
- Sloka Vartika — Acharya Vidyananda
- Aaptpareeksha — Acharya Vidyananda
- Pramanpareeksha — Acharya Vidyananda
- Patra Pareeksha — Acharya Vidyanand
- Kshatriyachudamani — Acharya Vadibhasingh Suri
- Gadyachintamani — Acharya Vadibhasingh Suri
- Kartikeya Anupreksha — Acharya Kartikeya Swami
- Tattvarthasara — Acharya Amritchand
- PurusharthasiddhiUpaya — Acharya Amritchandra
- Atmakhyati Tika — Acharya Amritchandra
- Laghutatvasphot — Acharya Amritchandra
- Tattvapradipika Tika — Acharya Amritchandra
- Varang Charitra — Shri Jata Singh Nandi
- Chandraprabha Charitra — Acharya Veeranandi
- Kashay Pahud — Acharya Gundhar
- Gommatasara — Acharya Nemichandra Siddhanta Chakravarti
- Pashanahchariu — Sage Padmakirti
- Triloksara — Acharya Nemichandran Siddhant Chakraborty
- Labdhisar — Acharya Nemichandran Siddhant Chakraborty
- Kshapanasar — Acharya Nemichandran Siddhant Chakraborty
- Tiloyapannatti — Acharya Yativrishabha
- Jambudvipa Pannatti — Acharya Yativrishabha
- Dhawala Tika — Acharya Veersen
- Yashstilak Champu — Acharya Somdev
- Nitivakyamrit — Acharya Somdev
- Adhyatmatarangini — Acharya Somdev
- Siddhivinischaya Tika — Brihad Anantavirya
- Pramanasamgrahabhashya — Brihad Anantavirya
- Shaktayana Shabdanushasana — Acharya Shaktayana
- Kevali Bhukti — Acharya Shaktayana
- Laghu Dravya Sangrah — Acharya Nemichand
- Vihad Dravya Sangrah — Acharya Nemichandra
- Prameya-Kamal-Martand — Acharya Prabhachandra
- Nyay Kumudchandra — Acharya Prabhachandra
- Tattvartha-vrittipada-vivaranam — Acharya Prabhachandra
- Shaktayan-Nyas — Acharya Prabhachandra
- Shabdambhoj Bhaskar — Acharya Prabhachandra
- Gadyakathakosh — Acharya Prabhachandra
- Pradyumnacharitra — Acharya Mahasena
- Bhaktamar Strotra — Acharya Mantung
- Padmanandi Panchavinshatika — Acharya Padmanandi (II)
- Mulachara — Swami of Acharya Vattaker
- Gyanarnav — Shubhachandracharya ji
- Bhagavati Aradhana — Acharya Shivarya (Shivkoti)
- Amitgati Sravakacharya — Acharya Amitgati
- Dharma Pariksha — Acharya Amitgati
- Subhashit Ratna Sandoh — Acharya Amitgati
- Tattva Bhavana — Acharya Amitgati
- Panch Sangrah — Acharya Amitgati
- Bhavana Dvatrinshatika — Acharya Amitgati
- Niyamasara Tika — Acharya Padmaprabhamaladharideva
- Parsvnath Stotra — Acharya Padmaprabhamaladharideva
- Dharmaamrita — Acharya Nayasena
- Samayasaratatparyavrttitika — Acharya Jayasena (II)
- Niyamasaratatparyavrttitika — Acharya Jayasena (II)
- Panchastikayatatparyavrttitika — Acharya Jayasena (II)
- Tattvanushasana — Acharya Ramsen
- Prameyaratnamala — Acharya Laghu Anantavirya
- Siddhantsaar — Acharya Narendrasen
- Parīkşāmukha — Acharya Māņikyanandi
- Nyayadipika — Acharya Dharmabhushan Yeti
- Dravya Prakash Nayachakra — Acharya Mayil Dhawal
- Padma Purana — Acharya Ravishena
- Mulachara — Swami Acharya Vattaker
- Ganitasar Sangrah — Acharya Mahavir
- Shripal Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Shantinath Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Vardhaman Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Mallinath Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Yashodhar Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Dhanyakumar Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Sukmal Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Sudarshan Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Jambuswamy Charitra — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Mulachar Pradeep — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Parsvnath Purana — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Siddhantasar Deepak — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Tattvarthasara Deepak — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Agamasara — Acharya Sakalkirti
- Meru Mandir Purana — Sri Vamana Muni Ji
- Praman Granth — Acharya Vajranandi
- Chaubisi Purana — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Shrenik Charitra — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Sri Pandava Purana — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Sri Shrenik Charitra — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Chandraprabha Charitra — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Karakandu Charitra — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Chandana Charitra — Acharya Shubhchandra
- Jivandhar Charitr — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Adhyatmatarangini — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Prakrit Lakshan — Acharya Shubhachandra
- Ganitasar Sangrah — Acharya Sridhar
- Trilokasaratika — Acharya Madhavachand
- Yogasara Praabhrit — Acharya Amitgati
- Brihatkathakosha — Acharya Harisena
- Aradhanasar — Acharya Ravibhadra
- Acharsar — Acharya Veeranandi
- Vardhaman Charitra — Acharya Asag
- Sudansana Chariu — Acharya Nayanandi
- Ekibhav Stotra — Acharya Vadiraj
- Puransar collection — Acharya Srichand
- Vasunandi Sravakacharya — Acharya Vasunandi
- Bhavana Paddhati — Acharya Padmanandi
- Angar Dharmaamrita — Pandit Ashadhar
- Sagar Dharmamrit — Pandit Ashadhar
- Bharatesh Vaibhav — Mahakavi Ratnakar ji
- Samaysar Natak — Pandit Banarsidas
- Brahma Vilas — Bhaiya Bhagwatidas
- Chhadhala — Pandit Dyantarai
- Kriya Kosh — Pandit Daulatram (first)
- Bhav Deepika — Pandit Deepchand
- Chid Vilas — Pandit Deepchand
- Parshva Purana — Pandit Bhudhardas
- Jin Shatak — Pandit Bhudhardas
- Mokshamarg Prakashak — Pandit Todermal
- Gommatasara Tika — Pandit Todarmal
- Labdhisar Tika — Pandit Todermal
- Kshapanasar Tika — Pandit Todermal
- Triloksar Tika — Pandit Todermal
- ?
- Purusharthsiddhiupayetika — Pandit Todermal
- Jain Siddhanta Praveshika — Pandit Gopaldasji Baraiya
- Chhadhala — Pt. Daulatramji (II)
- Ratnakaranda Vachanika — Pt. Sadasukhdas
- Samaysar Vachanika — Pt. Jaichand Chavda
- Chhadhala — Pandit Budhajan
- Mahavirashtak Stotra — Pandit Bhagchand
- Jainendra Siddhanta Kosha — Kshullaka Jinendra Varn
Shvetambara texts
Agamas are the main scriptures followed by Jains as preached by Tirthankars. Both Shwetambar and Digambar sects believe in 12 Agamas. Both also believe that the 12th Agama Drishtivaad (Dṛṣṭivāda) was lost over a period of time and realised the need to turn the oral tradition to written. While Digambaras believed that all the 12 Agamas were lost, Shwetambars believed that the first 11 Agamas were not lost. They compiled them in written format in the 6th century CE in Vallabhi, Gujarat. The list is as follows.
Agamas
There are 45 Agamas (11 Angā Agamas and 34 Angā Bahya Agamas).
11 Angā Agamas
- Āyāraṃga (Sanskrit: Ācāranga, meaning: 'On monastic conduct')
- Sūyagaḍa (Sūtrakṛtānga, 'On heretical systems and views')
- Ṭhāṇaṃga (Sthānānga, 'On different points [of the teaching]')
- Samavāyaṃga (Samavāyānga, 'On rising numerical groups')
- Viyāha-pannatti / Bhagavaī (Vyākhyā-prajñapti or Bhagavatī, 'Exposition of explanations' or 'the holy one')
- Nāyā-dhamma-kahāo (Jñāta-dharmakathānga, 'Parables and religious stories')
- Uvāsaga-dasāo (Upāsaka-daśāḥ, 'Ten chapters on the Jain lay follower')
- Aṇuttarovavāiya-dasāo (Antakṛd-daśāḥ, 'Ten chapters on those who put an end to rebirth in this very life')
- Anuttaraupapātikadaśāh (Anuttaropapātika-daśāḥ, 'Ten chapters on those who were reborn in the uppermost heavens')
- Paṇha-vāgaraṇa (Praśna-vyākaraṇa, 'Questions and explanations')
- Vivāga-suya (Vipākaśruta, 'Bad or good results of deeds performed')
34 Anga Bahya Agamas
The 34 Anga Bahya Agamas consist of 12 Upānga Agamas, 6 Cheda sūtras, 6 Mūla sūtras, and 10 Paiṇṇaya sutras.
Upānga Agamas
- Uvavāiya-sutta (Sanskrit: Aupapātika-sūtra, 'Places of rebirth')
- Rāya-paseṇaijja or Rāyapaseṇiya (Rāja-praśnīya, 'Questions of the king')
- Jīvājīvābhigama (Jīvājīvābhigama, 'Classification of animate and inanimate entities')
- Pannavaṇā (Prajñāpanā, 'Enunciation on topics of philosophy and ethics')
- Sūriya-pannatti (Sūrya-prajñapti, 'Exposition on the sun')
- Jambūdvīpa-pannatti (Jambūdvīpa-prajñapti, 'Exposition on the Jambū continent and the Jain universe')
- Canda-pannatti (Candra-prajñapti, 'Exposition on the moon and the Jain universe')
- Nirayāvaliyāo or Kappiya (Narakāvalikā, 'Series of stories on characters reborn in hells')
- Kappāvaḍaṃsiāo (Kalpāvataṃsikāḥ, 'Series of stories on characters reborn in the kalpa heavens')
- Pupphiāo (Puṣpikāḥ, 'Flowers' refers to one of the stories')
- Puppha-cūliāo (Puṣpa-cūlikāḥ, 'The nun Puṣpacūlā')
- Vaṇhi-dasāo (Vṛṣṇi-daśāh, 'Stories on characters from the legendary dynasty known as Andhaka-Vṛṣṇi')
Cheda sūtras (texts relating to the conduct and behaviour of monks and nuns)
- Āyāra-dasāo (Sanskrit: Ācāradaśāh, 'Ten [chapters] about monastic conduct', chapter 8 is the famed Kalpa-sūtra)
- Bihā Kappa (Bṛhat Kalpa, '[Great] Religious code')
- Vavahāra (Vyavahāra, 'Procedure')
- Nisīha (Niśītha, 'Interdictions')
- Jīya-kappa (Jīta-kalpa, Customary rules)
- Mahā-nisīha (Mahā-niśītha, Large Niśītha)
Mūla sūtras ('Fundamental texts' which are foundational works studied by new monastics)
- Dasaveyāliya-sutta (Sanskrit: Daśavaikālika-sūtra), this is memorized by all new Jain mendicants
- Uttarajjhayaṇa-sutta (Uttarādhyayana-sūtra)
- Āvassaya-sutta (Āvaśyaka-sūtra)
- Piṇḍa-nijjutti and Ogha-nijjutti (Piṇḍa-niryukti and Ogha-niryukti), Cūlikasūtras ("appendixes")
- Nandī-sūtra – discusses the five types of knowledge
- Anuyogadvāra-sūtra – a technical treatise on analytical methods, discusses Anekantavada
Paiṇṇaya sutras (Sanskrit: Prakīrnaka sūtras, "Miscellaneous")
- Cau-saraṇa (Sanskrit: Catuḥśaraṇa, The 'four refuges')
- Āura-paccakkhāṇa (Ātura-pratyākhyāna, 'Sick man's renunciation')
- Bhatta-parinnā (Bhakta-parijñā,'Renunciation of food')
- Saṃthāraga (Saṃstāraka, 'Straw bed')
- Tandula-veyāliya (Taṇḍula-vaicārika,'Reflection on rice grains')
- Canda-vejjhaya (Candravedhyaka, 'Hitting the mark')
- Devinda-tthaya (Devendra-stava, 'Praise of the kings of gods')
- Gaṇi-vijjā (Gaṇi-vidyā,'A Gaṇi's knowledge')
- Mahā-paccakkhāṇa (Mahā-pratyākhyāna,'Great renunciation')
- Vīra-tthava (Vīra-stava,'Great renunciation')
Major scriptures by acharyas
Major scriptures by Acharya Umaswati (1st–2nd Century CE)
- Tattvartha Sutra (On the Nature [artha] of Reality [tattva])
- Prasamarati (guide for the aspirant on the path of peace and liberation from karmic bondage)
Major scriptures by Acharya Vimalsuri (3rd Century CE)
- Paumchariya (Jain Ramayan)
Major scriptures by Acharya Haribhadrasuri (8th Century CE)
- Anekāntajayapatākā [The Victory Banner of Anekantavada (Relativism)] – which puts forward arguments about Anekantavada
- Anekāntavādapraveśa, discusses Jain Philosophy
- Anekāntasiddhi – establishes the concept of non-absolutism (anekānta)
- Ātmasiddhi (Realization of Self), a work about the Soul
- Upadeśapada, collection of stories which depicts how difficult it is to secure a human birth
- Daṃsaṇasuddhi, text deals with Samyagdarśana (right faith) and its purity
- Darisaṇasattari, another work on Samyagdarśana
- Dhammasangahaṇi, work on Dharma
- Lokatattvanirṇaya, a work of comparative religion where he talks about Hindu Gods
- Saṃsāradāvānalastuti, a work praising Thirtankaras
- Samarāiccakahā, a collection of stories
- Sambohapayaraṇa, a work on philosophy
- Ashtakaprakarana (The Eightfold Explanation)
- Dharmabindu – which outlines the duties of the laity, outlines rules for mendicants, and describes the bliss of moksha
- Dhūrtākhyāna (The Rogue's Stories)
- Pañcāśaka – a Prakrit work on rituals and spiritual matters
- Ṣaḍdarśanasamuccaya (Compendium of Six Philosophies) – which compares Jainism with other schools of Indian philosophy
- Samarāiccakahā (The Story of Samarāicca) – a narrative which outlines the effects of karma in a story about the enmity of its characters which endures over several reincarnations
- Sāstravārtāsamuccaya (The Array of Explanatory Teachings
- Yogabindu (The Seeds of Yoga) – a work on yoga
- Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya (An Array of Views on Yoga) – another work on yoga
- Yogaśataka – a third work on yoga. In these three volumes, he compares the yoga of Jainism with the other varieties of yoga prevalent in India at the time.
- Pariśiṣṭaparvan (Sthaviravali)
- Siddha-Hema-Śabdanuśāśana (grammar)
- Abhidhan-Chintamani (lexicon)
- Arhanniti, a work on politics from a Jain perspective
- Kāvyānuśāsana (a work on poetics)
- Chandonuśāsana (a work on prosody)
- Pramāṇa-mimaṁsa (epistemology)
- Vītarāga-Stotra
- Deśī-Nāmamālā (lexicon of non-Sanskrit origin words)
- Nighāṇṭuśeṣa (botanical lexicon)
Major scriptures by Acharya (15th Century AD)
- Siri-Sirivala-Kaha
- Śrāddha Vidhi Prakaraṇa
Major scriptures by Mahopādhyāya Yashovijaya (17th Century AD)
- Ashtasahasri Tatparyavivarana Tika
- Adhyatmasara
- Adhyatmopanisatprakarana
- Dharmapariksa
- Jaina Nyayakhandakhadya
- Jaina Tarkabhasa
- Jnanasara
- Commentary on Jnanarnava
- Shripal raja no Ras
Others
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (September 2019) |
- Yogaśāstra
- Siddha-Hema-Śabdanuśāśana
- Trishashthi-Shalaka-Purusha-Charitra
- Bhadrabahu Samhita
- Jnanarnava or the Yogapradipadhikara
- Pramana-mimansa (logic)
Texts claimed by both the sects
- Tattvartha Sutra - first Jain text written in Sanskrit
Other texts
- Ajitha purana
- Antakrddaasah
- Aupapātika
- Anuttaraupapātikadaśāh
- Atma Siddhi
- Aupapatika
- Bahuriband
- Cīvaka Cintāmaṇi
- Drstivada
- Jnatrdharmakathah
- Kalpa Sūtra
- Līlāvatīsāra
- Lokavibhaga
- Nālaṭiyār
- Neelakesi
- Nishitha
- Nivvāṇalīlāvaīkahā
- Palamozhi Naanuru
- Prasnavyakaranani
- Purvas
- Samavayanga Sutra
- Acaranga Sutra
- Shantinatha Charitra
- Silappatikaram
- Sirupanchamoolam
- Sthananga Sutra
- Sutrakritanga
- Upasakadasah
- Vaddaradhane
- Valayapathi
- Varangacharita
- Vikramarjuna Vijaya
- Vipakasruta
- Vyākhyāprajñapti
See also
- Champat Rai Jain
- A.N. Upadhye
- Bal Patil
- Agama (Hinduism)
- Āgama (Buddhism)
References
Citations
- von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 109–110.
- Champat Rai Jain 1929b, p. 135.
- Champat Rai Jain 1929b, p. 136.
- Dundas 2002, pp. 60–61.
- Dundas 2002, p. 61.
- Natubhai Shah 2004, pp. 39–40.
- Vijay K. Jain 2012, p. xi.
- Winternitz 1972, p. 427.
- Nagendra Kr. Singh. (2001). Encyclopedia of Jainism (Edited by Nagendra Kr. Singh). New Delhi: Anmol Publications. ISBN 81-261-0691-3 page 4308
- Yoga: The Indian Tradition. Edited by Ian Whicher and David Carpenter. London: Routledgecurzon, 2003. ISBN 0-7007-1288-7 page 64
- C. Chappie (1993) Nonviolence to Animals, Earth and Self in Asian Traditions. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-1497-3 page 5
- Bronkhorst, Johannes. "The Formative Period of Jainism (c. 500 BCE – 200 CE)" (PDF). Brill's Encyclopedia of Jainism Online. Denison University University of Edinburgh University of Bergen University of California, Berkeley John E. Cort, Paul Dundas, Knut A. Jacobsen, Kristi L. Wiley. doi:10.1163/2590-2768_BEJO_COM_047082.
- Melton & Baumann 2010, p. 1553.
- Jacobi, Hermann (1884). F. Max Müller (ed.). The Ācāranga Sūtra. Sacred Books of the East vol.22, Part 1. Oxford: The Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-7007-1538-X. p. xlii
- Natubhai Shah 2004, p. 40.
- von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 112–113.
- Upinder Singh 2016, p. 444.
- Vijay K. Jain 2016, p. xii.
- Jaini 1998, p. 78–81.
- von Glasenapp 1925, p. 124.
- von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 121–122.
- "Suryaprajnapti Sūtra". The Schoyen Collection. Archived from the original on 15 June 2017.
- Upinder Singh 2016, p. 26.
- von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 110–111.
- Balbir, Nalini. "Śvetāmbara canon". JAINpedia.
- Winternitz 1972, pp. 428–430.
- Burgess, Jas (1888). Indian antiquary a journal of oriental research vol.17.
- Balbir, Nalini. "Prakīrṇaka-sūtras". JAINpedia.
- Balbir, Nalini. "Digambara canon". JAINpedia.
- Vijay K. Jain 2012, p. xii.
- Sagarmal Jain, Shreeprakash Pandey (1998) Jainism in a Global Perspective p. 239. Collection of Jain papers of 1993 Parliament of World Religions, Chicago. Parshwanath Vidyapith Pubs.
- Dundas 2002, p. 80.
- Vijay K. Jain 2012, p. xi–xii.
- Jaini 1927, p. 5.
- Jaini 1991, p. 32–33.
- Finegan 1989, p. 221.
- Balcerowicz 2003, pp. 25–34.
- Chatterjee 2000, p. 282–283.
- Jones & Ryan 2007, pp. 439–440.
- Dundas 2006, pp. 395–396.
- Umāsvāti 1994, p. xiii.
- Johnson 1995, pp. 46–51, 91–96.
- Qvarnström, Olle; Jainism and Early Buddhism: Essays in Honor of Padmanabh S. Jaini, page 154.
- Jaini 1998, p. 85
- Hartmut Scharfe (1977). Grammatical Literature.
- Deshpande, Madhav M. (1975), "Non-Pāṇinian Grammars on Savarṇa", Critical Studies in Indian Grammarians I, The Theory of Homogeneity (Savar?ya), University of Michigan Press, pp. 109–126, doi:10.3998/mpub.19360.15, ISBN 978-0-89148-052-5, retrieved 2 March 2025
- Bollée, Willem (2006). "Review of Pañcagranthī Vyākaraṇa of Buddhisāgarsūri. A Critical Edition. [B. L. Series 18]". Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde Südasiens / Vienna Journal of South Asian Studies. 50: 211–212. ISSN 0084-0084.
- Kielhorn, F. (1888). "A brief account of Hêmachandras Sanskrit Grammar". Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde des Morgenlandes. 2: 18–24. ISSN 0084-0076.
- Board, Pratiyogita Darpan Editorial. Pratiyogita Darpan Extra Issue Series-3 Indian History. Upkar Prakashan.
- Barodia, U. D. (1909). History and Literature of Jainism. Jain Graduates' Association.
- Gheverghese 2016, p. 23.
- Banerjee, Satya Ranjan (2005). Prolegomena to Prakritica et Jainica. The Asiatic Society. p. 61.
- "Jaina Sutras, Part II (SBE45) Index". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 2 March 2025.
- "Jaina Sutras, Part II (SBE45) Index". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 2 March 2025.
- Clark, Walter Eugene (1924). "Māgadhī and Ardhamāgadhī". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 44: 81–121. doi:10.2307/593543. ISSN 0003-0279.
- Cush, Robinson & York 2012, pp. 515, 839.
- Zvelebil 1992, pp. 13–16.
- Cort 1998, p. 163.
- Dundas 2002, p. 116–117.
- Zvelebil 1992, pp. 37–38.
- Spuler 1952, pp. 24–25, context: 22–27.
- Cort 1998, p. 164.
- Dundas 2002, pp. 118–120.
- Dundas 2002, p. 83.
- Guy, John (January 2012), "Jain Manuscript Painting", The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Heilburnn Timeline of Art History, archived from the original on 2 April 2013, retrieved 25 April 2013
- Dundas 2002, pp. 83–84.
- Jain, Vijay K. (2021). Ācārya Māņikyanandi’s Parīkşāmukha Sūtra – आचार्य माणिक्यनन्दि विरचित परीक्षामुख सूत्र. Dehradun: Vikalp Printers. ISBN 978-81-932726-9-5.
Sources
- Balcerowicz, Piotr (2003), Essays in Jaina Philosophy and Religion, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1977-1
- Chatterjee, Asim Kumar (2000), A Comprehensive History of Jainism: From the Earliest Beginnings to AD 1000, Munshiram Manoharlal, ISBN 978-81-215-0931-2
- Cort, John E., ed. (1998), Open Boundaries: Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0-7914-3785-8
- Cort, John E. (2010) [1953], Framing the Jina: Narratives of Icons and Idols in Jain History, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-538502-1
- Cush, Denise; Robinson, Catherine; York, Michael (2012), Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-135-18978-5
- Dalal, Roshen (2010) [2006], The Religions of India: A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths, Penguin books, ISBN 978-0-14-341517-6
- Dundas, Paul (2002) [1992], The Jains (2nd ed.), London and New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-26605-5
- Dundas, Paul (2006), Olivelle, Patrick (ed.), Between the Empires : Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-977507-1
- Finegan, Jack (1989), An Archaeological History of Religions of Indian Asia, Paragon House, ISBN 978-0-913729-43-4
- Gheverghese, Joseph George (2016), Indian Mathematics: Engaging With The World From Ancient To Modern Times, World Scientific, ISBN 9781786340603
- Jain, Champat Rai (1929), Risabha Deva - The Founder of Jainism, Allahabad: The Indian Press Limited,
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Jain, Champat Rai (1929), The Practical Dharma, The Indian Press Ltd.,
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- (2011), Acharya Umasvami's Tattvarthsutra (1st ed.), Uttarakhand: , ISBN 978-81-903639-2-1,
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- (2012), Acharya Amritchandra's Purushartha Siddhyupaya: Realization of the Pure Self, With Hindi and English Translation, , ISBN 978-81-903639-4-5,
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Jain, Vijay K. (2016), Ācārya Samantabhadra's Ratnakarandaka-śrāvakācāra: The Jewel-casket of Householder's Conduct, , ISBN 978-81-903639-9-0,
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Jaini, Jagmandar-lāl (1927), Gommatsara Jiva-kanda Alt URL
- Jaini, Padmanabh S. (1991), Gender and Salvation: Jaina Debates on the Spiritual Liberation of Women, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-06820-9
- Jaini, Padmanabh S. (1998) [1979], The Jaina Path of Purification, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1578-0
- Johnson, W.J. (1995), Harmless Souls: Karmic Bondage and Religious Change in Early Jainism with Special Reference to Umāsvāti and Kundakunda, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1309-0
- Jones, Constance; Ryan, James D. (2007), Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Infobase Publishing, ISBN 978-0-8160-5458-9
- Melton, J. Gordon; Baumann, Martin, eds. (2010), Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, Vol. One: A-B (2nd ed.), ABC-CLIO, ISBN 978-1-59884-204-3
- Shah, Natubhai (2004) [First published in 1998], Jainism: The World of Conquerors, vol. I, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1938-2
- Singh, Upinder (2016), A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century, Pearson Education, ISBN 978-93-325-6996-6
- Spuler, Bertold (1952), Handbook of Oriental Studies, Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-04190-5
- Umāsvāti, Umaswami (1994), That which is (Translator: Nathmal Tatia), Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-0-06-068985-8
- von Glasenapp, Helmuth (1925), Jainism: An Indian Religion of Salvation [Der Jainismus: Eine Indische Erlosungsreligion], (trans.), Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass (Reprint: 1999), ISBN 978-81-208-1376-2
- Winternitz, Maurice (1972), A History of Indian Literature Vol. II. Buddhist Literature and Jaina Literature (2nd ed.), University of Calcutta
- Zvelebil, Kamil (1992), Companion Studies to the History of Tamil Literature, Brill Academic, ISBN 978-90-04-09365-2
Further reading
- Rishabhanatha, in Encyclopaedia Britannica, Editors of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2010
- Dalal, Roshen (2010), Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide, Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-341421-6
- Dalal, Roshen (2010), The Religions of India: A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths, Penguin books, ISBN 978-0-14-341517-6
- Stevenson, John (1848), The Kalpa Sutra and Nava Tatva (tr. from Magadhi), Bernard Quaritch, London
- Thomas, Edward (1877), Jainism, London, Trübner & co.
- Jacobi, Hermann (1884), Jaina Sutras Part I (Akaranga Sutra & Kalpa Sutra), Oxford, The Clarendon press
- Jacobi, Hermann (1884), Jaina Sutras Part II (Uttarâdhyayana Sutra & Sutrakritanga Sutra), Oxford, The Clarendon press
- Stevenson, Sinclair (1915), The Heart of Jainism, H. Milford: Oxford University Press
- M. S. Ramaswami Ayyangar; B. Seshagiri Rao (1922), Studies in South Indian Jainism, Premier Press, Madras
Jain texts
Bibliography of Sanskrit and Prakrit Jain texts (primary sources), from Dundas (2002):
- Haribhadra. Anekāntajayapatākā, ed. H.R. Kapadia, 2 vols, Baroda, 1940 and 1947.
- Āśādhara. Anagāradharmāmṛta, ed. K. Shastri, New Delhi, 1975.
- Jinasena. Ādipurāṇa, ed. Pannalal Jain, 2 vols, Kashi, 1964 and 1965.
- Ācārāṅgasūtra with Śīlāṅka’s commentary, in Muni Jambūvijaya (ed.). Ācārāṅgasūtram and Sūtrakṛtāṅgasūtram (re-edition of Āgamodaya Samiti edition), Delhi, 1978.
- Haribhadra. Aṣṭakaprakaraṇa, Ahmedabad, 1918.
- Uvavāiya Suttam, ed. G. Lalwani with English trans. by K. C. Lalwani, Jaipur, 1988.
- Jinadāsa. Āvaśyakacūrṇi, 2 vols, Ratlam, 1928 and 1929.
- Bhadrabāhu. Āvaśyakaniryukti with Haribhadra’s commentary (reprint of Āgamodaya Samiti edition), vol. 1, Bombay, 1981.
- Āvaśyakasūtra in Dasaveyāliyasuttaṃ, Uttarajjhayaṇāiṃand Āvassayasuttaṃ, ed. Muni Puṇyavijaya and A. M. Bhojak (Jaina Āgama Series 15), Bombay, 1977.
- Viyāhapaṇṇatti (Bhagavaī), in Pupphabhikkhū (ed.), Suttāgame, vol. 1, Gurgaon, 1953.
- Śivārya. Bhagavatī Ārādhanā with Aparājita Sūri’s commentary, ed. K. Siddhantashastri, Sholapur, 1978.
- Siddhicandra. Bhānucandragaṇicarita, ed. M. D. Desai, Ahmedabad/Calcutta, 1941.
- Hariṣeṇa. Bṛhatkathākoṣa, ed. A. N. Upadhye, Bombay, 1943.
- Śīlāṅka. Cauppannamahāpurisacariyaṃ, ed. A. M. Bhojak, Varanasi, 1961.
- Haribhadra. , ed. A. N. Upadhye, Bombay, 1944.
- Udayaprabha Sūri. , ed. Muni Caturavijaya and Muni Puṇyavijaya, Bombay, 1949.
- Jayasiṃha Sūri. , ed. P. L. B. Gandhi, Bombay, 1940.
- Bhāskaranandi. , ed. S. Ohira, New Delhi, 1973.
- Devasena. , ed. A. N. Upadhye, Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Institute 15 (1935):198–206.
- Siddhasena Divākara. , in A. N. Upadhye (1971).
- , ed. E. Leumann and trans. W. Schubring, in Schubring (1977).
- Jinadatta Sūri. , ed. Gandhi, Three Apabhraṃśa Works.
- Jinabhadra. , ed. and trans. E. A. Solomon, Ahmedabad, 1966.
- Punnāta Jinasena. Harivaṃśapurāṇa, ed. P. Jain, Kashi, 1962.
- Isibhāsiyāiṃ: A Jaina Text of Early Period, ed. W. Schubring, Ahmedabad, 1974.
- Śubhacandra. Jñānārṇava, ed. H. L. Jain, Kailashchandra Siddhantacharya and A. N. Upadhye, Sholapur, 1977.
- Jñātādharmakathāḥ, in Pupphabhikkhū (ed.), Suttāgame, vol. 1, Gurgaon, 1953.
- Yaśovijaya. , ed. G. P. Shah, Bombay, 1986.
- , vol. 1, Bombay, 1928.
- Svāmikumāra. , ed. A. N. Upadhye, Agas, 1978.
- Jinapāla. , ed. Muni Jinavijaya, Bombay, 1956.
- , ed. Muni Jinavijaya, Calcutta, 1932.
- , ed. Pannalal Sahityacarya, Phaltan, 1970.
- Jineśvara Sūri. , ed. Muni Jinavijaya, Bombay, 1949.
- Guṇadhara. Kaṣāyapāhuḍa with Vīrasena’s Jayadhavalā commentary, vol. 1, ed. Phulcandra, Mahendrakumar and Kailashcandra, Mathura, 1974.
- Bhadrabāhu. Kalpasūtra, ed. H. Jacobi, Leipzig, 1879.
- Haribhadra. , ed. Muni Bhānuvijaya, Ahmedabad, 1963.
- . Mūlācāra, ed. K. Shastri, J. Shastri and P. Jain, 2 vols, New Delhi, 1984 and 1986.
- Pradyumna Sūri. with Devacandra Sūri’s commentary, vol. 1, ed. A. M. Bhojak, Ahmedabad, 1971.
- with bhāṣya and cūrṇi, ed. Amaramuni and Muni Kanhaiyalal, 4 vols, Agra, 1957–60.
- Kundakunda. Niyamasāra, ed. and trans. U. Sain, Lucknow, 1931.
- Prabhācandra. , ed. M. K. Jain, Bombay, 1941.
- Kakka Sūri. Nābhinandanajinoddhāraprabandha, ed. B. Harakchand, Ahmedabad, 1928.
- , ed. Muni Puṇyavijaya, D. Malvania and A. M. Bhojak (Jaina Āgama Series 1), Bombay, 1968.
- Devavācaka. with Haribhadra’s commentary, ed. Muni Puṇyavijaya, Varanasi/Ahmedabad, 1966.
- Raviṣeṇa. , ed. P. Jain, 3 vols, Kashi, 1958–9.
- Hemacandra. or Pariśiṣṭaparvan, ed. H. Jacobi, Calcutta, 1883; trans. Fynes (1998).
- Yogīndu. , ed. A. N. Upadhye, Bombay, 1937.
- Prabhācandra. Prabhāvakacarita, ed. Jinavijaya, Ahmedabad/Calcutta, 1940.
- : Part 1, ed. Muni Puṇyavijaya and Amritlal Mohanlal Bhojak (Jaina Āgama Series 17.1), Bombay, 1984.
- Dharmasāgara. , Surat, 1937.
- , ed. Jinavijaya, Shantiniketan, 1936.
- , ed. Muni Punyavijaya, D. Malvania and A. M. Bhojak (Jaina Āgama Series 9.2), Bombay, 1971.
- Kundakunda. Pravacanasāra with Amṛtacandra’s commentary, ed. A. N. Upadhye, Bombay, 1935.
- , in Pupphabhikkhū (ed.), Suttāgame, vol. 2, Gurgaon, 1954.
- Samavāyāṅgasūtram, in Muni Jambūvijaya (ed.), Sthānāṅga Sūtram and Samavāyāṅga Sūtram with Abhayadeva Sūri’s commentary (re-edition of Āgamodaya Samiti Series edition), Delhi, 1985.
- Haribhadra. , ed. H. Jacobi, Calcutta, 1926.
- Sūtrakṛtāṅgasūtram, in Muni Jambūvijaya (ed.), Ācārāṅgasūtram and Sūtrakṛtāṅgam with Śīlāṅka’s commentary (re-edition of Āgamodaya Samiti Series edition), Delhi, 1978.
- Ṣaṭkhaṇḍāgama, vols 2 and 3, ed. H. Jain, A. N. Upadhye and K. Siddhantashastri, Sholapur, 1976 and 1980.
- , pt. 2, ed. Muni Jambūvijaya, Bombay, 1977.
- Śākaṭāyana. , ed. Muni Jambūvijaya, Bhavnagar, 1974.
- Jinavallabha Sūri. , in Gandhi, Three Apabhraṃśa Works.
- , ed. P. Soni, Bombay, 1920.
- Indranandi. , in M. Shastri (ed.), , Bombay, 1918.
- Samayasundara. , Surat, 1939.
- Kundakunda. Samayasāra, text, trans. and comm. by A. Chakravarti, Banaras, 1930.
- Sthānāṅgasūtram, in Muni Jambūvijaya (ed.), Sthānāṅga Sūtram and Samavāyāṅga Sūtram with Abhayadeva Sūri’s commentary (re-edition of Āgamodaya Samiti Series edition), Delhi, 1985.
- Anantavīrya. , ed. M. K. Jain, Varanasi, 1959.
- Dharmasāgara. , ed. Muni Lābhasāgara, Kapadvanj, 1961.
- Umāsvāti. Tattvarthasūtra, in Sanghvi, S. (1974). Pt. Sukhlalji’s Commentary on Tattvārthasūtra of Vācaka Umāsvāti, trans. K. K. Dixit. Ahmedabad.
- Akalaṅka. (), ed. Mahendrakumar, 2 vols, Kashi, 1953 and 1957.
- Upāsakadaśāḥ, text and trans. in Hoernle, A. F. R. (1890). The Uvāsagadasāo or the Religious Experience of an Uvāsaga. Calcutta.
- Uttarādhyayanasūtra, in Pupphabhikkhū (ed.), Suttāgame, vol. 2, Gurgaon, 1954.
- Asaga. , ed. P. Jain, Sholapur, 1974.
- Saṅghadāsa. , ed. Muni Caturavijaya and Muni Puṇyavijaya, Gandhinagar, 1989.
- Jinabhadra. , ed. D. Malvania, 3 vols, Ahmedabad, 1966–8.
- Hemavijaya. , ed. Hargovinddas and Bechardas, Benares, 1911.
- Jinaprabha Sūri. , ed. Muni Jinavijaya, Bombay, 1941.
- , in Pupphabhikkhū (ed.), Suttāgame, vol. 1, Gurgaon, 1953.
- Jinaprabha Sūri. Vividhatīrthakalpa, ed. Muni Jinavijaya, Shantiniketan, 1934.
- Bhāvasena. , ed. V. Johrapurkar, Sholapur, 1964.
- Haribhadra. , ed. and trans. K. K. Dixit, Ahmedabad, 1968.
- Haribhadra. Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya, ed. and trans. K. K. Dixit, Ahmedabad, 1970.
- Hemacandra. Yogaśāstra, ed. Muni Jambūvijaya, 3 vols, Bombay, 1977–86.
External links
- Jainism books – Wisdom Library
- Jain eLibrary – Online collection of Jain Literature
- Jain Quantum - Jain Literature Search Engine
- Jain Shastras
- "Jain Agams". JainWorld.com. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015.
- Clay Sanskrit Library Archived 7 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine
- "Sacred texts (Jainism)". The British Library. Archived from the original on 12 July 2023. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
Jain literature Sanskrit ज न स ह त य refers to the literature of the Jain religion It is a vast and ancient literary tradition which was initially transmitted orally The oldest surviving material is contained in the canonical Jain Agamas which are written in Ardhamagadhi a Prakrit Middle Indo Aryan language Various commentaries were written on these canonical texts by later Jain monks Later works were also written in other languages like Sanskrit and Maharashtri Prakrit A 12th century manuscript of Hemachandra s Yogasastra in Sanskrit The text is notable for using 1 mm miniaturized Devanagari script Jain literature is primarily divided between the canons of the Digambara and Svetambara orders These two main sects of Jainism do not always agree on which texts should be considered authoritative More recent Jain literature has also been written in other languages like Marathi Tamil Rajasthani Dhundari Marwari Hindi Gujarati Kannada Malayalam and more recently in English BeliefsJains believe their religion is eternal and the teachings of the first tirthaṅkara Ṛṣabhanatha existed millions of years ago It states that the tirthaṅkaras taught in divine preaching halls called samavasarana and were heard by gods ascetics and laypersons These divine discourses were called srutajnana or empirical knowledge They comprised eleven angas and fourteen purvas The discourses are remembered and transmitted by the ganadharas or chief disciples and is composed of twelve angas parts limbs It is symbolically represented by a tree with twelve branches The spoken scriptural language is believed to be Magadhi Prakrit by Svetambara Jains and a form of divine sound or sonic resonance by Digambaras According to the Jain tradition the divine srutajnana or empirical knowledge of a tirthaṅkara is then converted into a sutta or scripture by disciples and from such suttas emerge the formal canons The suttas are grouped into twelve limbed baskets which are transmitted orally by the disciples In every universal cycle of Jain cosmology twenty four tirthaṅkaras appear and so do the Jain scriptures for that cycle Twelve agamas angas Stela depicting Shrut Jnana the knowledge which is heard directly from the omniscient fordmakers Statues depicting Bhadrabahu the last leader of a unified Jain community and the mauryan emperor Chandragupta who became a Jain monk late in life Initially the canonical scriptures were transmitted through an oral tradition and consisted of teachings of historical Jain leaders like Mahavira codified into various collections Gautama and other Gandhars the chief disciples of Mahavira are said to have compiled the original sacred scriptures which were divided into twelve Angas or parts They are referred to as the eleven Angas and the fourteen Purvas since the twelfth Anga comprises fourteen Purvas These scriptures are said to have contained the most comprehensive and accurate description of every branch of Jain learning The Jain Agamas and their commentaries were composed mainly in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit as well as in Maharashtri Prakrit While some authors date the composition of the Jain Agamas starting from the 6th century BCE some western scholars such as Ian Whicher and David Carpenter argue that the earliest portions of Jain canonical works were composed around the 4th or 3rd century BCE According to Johannes Bronkhorst it is extremely difficult to determine the age of the Jain Agamas however Mainly on linguistic grounds it has been argued that the Acaraṅga Sutra the Sutrakṛtaṅga Sutra and the Uttaradhyayana Sutra are among the oldest texts in the canon This does not guarantee that they actually date from the time of Mahavira nor even from the centuries immediately following his death nor does it guarantee that all parts of these texts were composed simultaneously Elsewhere Bronkhorst states that the Sutrakṛtaṅga dates from the 2nd century BCE at the very earliest based on how it references the Buddhist theory of momentariness which is a later scholastic development During the reign of Chandragupta Maurya c 324 or 321 c 297 BCE Acharya Bhadrabahu c 367 c 298 BCE said to have been the last knower of the complete Jain agamas was the head of Jain community At this time a long famine caused a crisis in the community who found it difficult to keep the entire Jain canon committed to memory Bhadrabahu decided to travel south to Karnataka with his adherents and Sthulabhadra another Jain leader remained behind The famine decimated the Jain community leading to the loss of many canonical texts According to Svetambara white clad tradition the agamas were collected on the basis of the collective memory of the ascetics in the first council of Pataliputra under the stewardship of Sthulibhadra in around to 463 367 BCE During the council eleven scriptures called Angas were compiled and the remnant of fourteen purvas were written down in a 12th Anga Another council was later organised in 2nd century BCE in Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves Kalinga now in Odisha during the reign of Kharavela The Svetambara order considers these Jain Agamas as canonical works and sees them as being based on an authentic oral tradition They consider their collection to represent a continuous tradition though they accept that their collection is also incomplete because of a lost Anga text and four lost Purva texts However these texts were rejected by the Digambara lit sky clad i e naked order which hold that Acharya Bhutabali 1st century CE was the last ascetic who had partial knowledge of the original canon According to Digambaras the Purvas and the original Agamas of Gautama were lost during the Mauryan period crisis and famine This Digambara stance on the loss of the Agamas is one of the disagreements that led to the main schism in Jainism Digambara masters proceeded to create new scriptures which contained the knowledge of the doctrine that had survived in their community As such Digambaras have a different set of canonical scriptures According to von Glasenapp the Digambara texts partially agree with the enumerations and works of older Svetambara texts but in many cases there are also major differences between the texts of the two major Jain traditions The Svetambara Siddhantha Top illustration Mahavira attains kevala jnana complete knowledge Bottom a samosarana divine preaching hall Folio 60 from Kalpasutra series loose leaf manuscript Patan Gujarat c 1472 The Suryaprajnaptisutra a 4th or 3rd century BCE Svetambara astronomical and mathematical text The top illustration depicts Mahavira while the bottom one illustrates his great disciple Gautama In 453 or 466 CE the Svetambara order held another council at Vallabhi The Svetambaras recompiled the Agamas and recorded them as written manuscripts under the leadership of Acharya Shraman Devardhigani along with other 500 Jain scholars The existing Svetambara canons are based on the Vallabhi council texts From the 15th century onwards various Svetambara subsects began to disagree on the composition of the canon Murtipujaks idol worshippers accept 45 texts while the Sthanakavasins and Terapanthins only accept 32 List of works The canons Siddhantha of the Svetambaras are generally composed of the following texts Twelve Angas limbs Ayaraṃga Jain Prakrit Sanskrit Acaranga meaning On monastic conduct Suyagaḍa Sutrakṛtaṅga On heretical systems and views Ṭhaṇaṃga Sthanaṅga On different points of the teaching Samavayaṃga Samavayaṅga On rising numerical groups Viyaha pannatti Bhagavai Vyakhya prajnapti or Bhagavati Exposition of explanations or the holy one Naya dhamma kahao Jnata dharmakathanga Parables and religious stories Uvasaga dasao Upasaka dasaḥ Ten chapters on the Jain lay follower Aṇuttarovavaiya dasao Antakṛd dasaḥ Ten chapters on those who put an end to rebirth in this very life Anuttaraupapatikadasah Anuttaropapatika dasaḥ Ten chapters on those who were reborn in the uppermost heavens Paṇha vagaraṇa Prasna vyakaraṇa Questions and explanations Vivaga suya Vipakasruta Bad or good results of deeds performed Diṭhivaya Dṛṣṭivada this text was lost after 1000 years of Mahavira Twelve Upaṅgas auxiliary limbs Uvavaiya sutta Sanskrit Aupapatika sutra Places of rebirth Raya paseṇaijja or Rayapaseṇiya Raja prasniya Questions of the king Jivajivabhigama Jivajivabhigama Classification of animate and inanimate entities Pannavaṇa Prajnapana Enunciation on topics of philosophy and ethics Suriya pannatti Surya prajnapti Exposition on the sun Jambudvipa pannatti Jambudvipa prajnapti Exposition on the Jambu continent and the Jain universe Canda pannatti Candra prajnapti Exposition on the moon and the Jain universe Nirayavaliyao or Kappiya Narakavalika Series of stories on characters reborn in hells Kappavaḍaṃsiao Kalpavataṃsikaḥ Series of stories on characters reborn in the kalpa heavens Pupphiao Puṣpikaḥ Flowers refers to one of the stories Puppha culiao Puṣpa culikaḥ The nun Puṣpacula Vaṇhi dasao Vṛṣṇi dasah Stories on characters from the legendary dynasty known as Andhaka Vṛṣṇi Six Chedasutras Texts relating to the conduct and behaviour of monks and nuns Ayara dasao Sanskrit Acaradasah Ten chapters about monastic conduct chapter 8 is the famed Kalpa sutra Biha Kappa Bṛhat Kalpa Great Religious code Vavahara Vyavahara Procedure Nisiha Nisitha Interdictions Jiya kappa Jita kalpa Customary rules only accepted as canonical by Murti pujaks Maha nisiha Maha nisitha Large Nisitha only accepted as canonical by Murti pujaks Four Mulasutras Fundamental texts which are foundational works studied by new monastics Dasaveyaliya sutta Sanskrit Dasavaikalika sutra this is memorized by all new Jain mendicants Uttarajjhayaṇa sutta Uttaradhyayana sutra Avassaya sutta Avasyaka sutra Piṇḍa nijjutti and Ogha nijjutti Piṇḍa niryukti and Ogha niryukti only accepted as canonical by Murti pujaks Two Culikasutras appendixes Nandi sutra discusses the five types of knowledge Anuyogadvara sutra a technical treatise on analytical methods discusses AnekantavadaMiscellaneous collections To reach the number 45 Murtipujak Svetambara canons contain a Miscellaneous collection of supplementary texts called the Paiṇṇaya suttas Sanskrit Prakirnaka sutras Miscellaneous This section varies in number depending on the individual sub sect from 10 texts to over 20 They also often included extra works often of disputed authorship named supernumerary Prakirṇakas The Paiṇṇaya texts are generally not considered to have the same kind of authority as the other works in the canon Most of these works are in Jaina Maharaṣṭri Prakrit unlike the other Svetambara scriptures which tend to be in Ardhamagadhi They are therefore most likely later works than the Aṅgas and Upaṅgas Murtipujak Jain canons will generally accept 10 Paiṇṇayas as canonical but there is widespread disagreement on which 10 scriptures are given canonical status The most widely accepted list of ten scriptures are the following Cau saraṇa Sanskrit Catuḥsaraṇa The four refuges Aura paccakkhaṇa Atura pratyakhyana Sick man s renunciation Bhatta parinna Bhakta parijna Renunciation of food Saṃtharaga Saṃstaraka Straw bed Tandula veyaliya Taṇḍula vaicarika Reflection on rice grains Canda vejjhaya Candravedhyaka Hitting the mark Devinda tthaya Devendra stava Praise of the kings of gods Gaṇi vijja Gaṇi vidya A Gaṇi s knowledge Maha paccakkhaṇa Maha pratyakhyana Great renunciation Vira tthava Vira stava Great renunciation The Digambara SiddhanthaAcharya Pushpadanta depicted writing down the ṢaṭkhaṅḍagamaAcharya Kundakunda one of the most important Digambara philosophers According to the Digambara tradition the original scriptures had been lost by about the 2nd century CE Acharya Bhutabali is considered the last ascetic who had some partial knowledge of the original canon Digambara tradition holds that Acharya Dharasena 1st century CE guided Acharya Pushpadanta and Acharya Bhutabali to write what remained of the lost teachings down into palm leaf scriptures These two Acharyas wrote the Ṣaṭkhaṅḍagama Six Part Scripture which is held to be one of the oldest Digambara texts They are dated to between the 2nd to 3rd century CE Around the same time Acharya Gunadhar wrote Kasayapahuda Treatise on the Passions These two texts are the two main Digambara Agamas The Digambara canon of scriptures includes these two main texts three commentaries on the main texts and four later Anuyogas expositions consisting of more than 20 texts The great commentator Virasena wrote two commentary texts on the Ṣaṭkhaṅḍagama the Dhaval tika on the first five volumes and Maha dhaval tika on the sixth volume of the Ṣaṭkhaṅḍagama around 780 CE Virasena and his disciple Jinasena also wrote a commentary on the Kasayapahuda known as Jaya dhavala tika There is no agreement on the canonical Anuyogas Expositions The Anuyogas were written between the 2nd and the 11th centuries CE either in Jaina Sauraseni Prakrit or in Sanskrit The expositions Anuyogas are divided into four literary categories The first Prathamanuyoga category contains various works such as Jain versions of the Ramayaṇa like the 7th century Padma puraṇa by Raviṣeṇa and Mahabharata like Jinasena s 8th century Harivaṃsa puraṇa as well as Jain universal histories like Jinasena s 8th century Adi puraṇa The calculation Karaṇanuyoga expositions are mainly works on Jain cosmology such as Tiloya paṇṇatti of Yati Vṛṣabha dating from the 6th to 7th century and karma for example Nemicandra s Gommaṭa sara The Gommatsara of Nemichandra fl 10th century is one of the most important Digambara works and provides a detailed summary of Digambara doctrine The behaviour Caraṇanuyoga expositions are texts about proper behaviour such as Vaṭṭakera s Mulacara on monastic conduct 2nd century and the Ratnakaraṇḍaka Sravakacara by Samantabhadra 5th century which focuses on the ethics of a layperson Works in this category also treat the purity of the soul such as the work of Kundakunda like the Samaya sara the Pancastikayasara and Niyamasara These works by Kundakunda 2nd century CE or later are highly revered and have been historically influential The substance Dravyanuyoga exposition includes texts about ontology of the universe and self Umasvamin s comprehensive Tattvartha sutra is the standard work on ontology and Pujyapada s 464 524 CE Sarvarthasiddhi is one of the most influential Digambara commentaries on the Tattvartha This collection also includes various works on epistemology and reasoning such as Samantabhadra s Apta mimaṃsa and the works of Akalaṅka 720 780 CE such as his commentary on the Apta mimaṃsa and his Nyaya viniscaya Post Canonical literatureThe Tattvarthsutra is regarded as the most authoritative book on Jainism and the only text authoritative in both the Svetambara and Digambara sectsBust of Hemachandra at Hemchandracharya North Gujarat UniversityDoctrinal and philosophical works There are various later Jain works that are considered post canonical that is to say they were written after the closure of the Jain canons though the different canons were closed at different historical eras and so this category is ambiguous Thus Umasvati s c between 2nd century and 5th century CE Tattvarthasutra On the Nature of Reality is included in the Digambara canon but not in the Svetambara canons though they do consider the work authoritative Indeed the Tattvarthasutra is considered the authoritative Jain philosophy text by all traditions of Jainism It has the same importance in Jainism as Vedanta Sutras and Yogasutras have in Hinduism Other non canonical works include various texts attributed to Bhadrabahu c 300 BCE which are called the Niryuktis and Samhitas According to Winternitz after the 8th century or so Svetambara Jain writers who had previously worked in Prakrit began to use Sanskrit The Digambaras also adopted Sanskrit somewhat earlier The earliest Jain works in Sanskrit include the writings of Siddhasena Divakara c 650 CE who wrote the Sanmatitarka The Logic of the True Doctrine is the first major Jain work on logic written in Sanskrit Other later works and writers include Jinabhadra 6th 7th century author of Avasyaksutra Jain tenets Visesanavati and Visesavasyakabhasya Commentary on Jain essentials Mallavadin 8th century author of Nayacakra and Dvadasaranayacakra Encyclopedia of Philosophy which discusses the schools of Indian philosophy Haribhadra suri c 8th century is an important Svetambara scholar who wrote commentaries on the Agamas He also wrote the Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya a key Jain text on Yoga which compares the Yoga systems of Buddhists Hindus and Jains Gunaratna c 1400 CE wrote a commentary on Haribhadra s work Prabhacandra 8th 9th century Jain philosopher composed a 106 Sutra Tattvarthasutra and exhaustive commentaries on two key works on Jain Nyaya Prameyakamalamartanda based on Manikyanandi s Parikshamukham and Nyayakumudacandra on Akalanka s Laghiyastraya Abhayadeva 1057 1135 CE author of Vadamahrnava Ocean of Discussions which is a 2 500 verse tika Commentary of Sanmartika and a great treatise on logic Hemachandra c 1088 c 1172 CE wrote the Yogasastra a textbook on yoga and Adhyatma Upanishad His minor work Anyayogavyvaccheda gives outlines of the Jaina doctrine in form of hymns This was later detailed by Mallisena c 1292 CE in his work Syadavadamanjari Vadideva 11th century He was a senior contemporary of Hemacandra and is said to have authored Paramananayatattavalokalankara and its voluminous commentary syadvadaratnakara that establishes the supremacy of doctrine of Syadvada There are also other important commentators on the Agamas including Abhayadeva suri c 11th century and Malayagiri c the 12th century Vidyanandi 11th century Jain philosopher composed the brilliant commentary on Acarya Umasvami s Tattvarthasutra known as Tattvarthashlokavartika Devendrasuri wrote the Karmagrantha which is an exposition of the Jain theory of Karma Yasovijaya 1624 1688 was a Jain scholar of Navya Nyaya and wrote Vrttis commentaries on most of the earlier Jain Nyaya works by Samantabhadra Akalanka Manikyanandi Vidyanandi Prabhacandra and others in the then prevalent Navya Nyaya style Yasovijaya has to his credit a prolific literary output more than 100 books in Sanskrit Prakrit Gujarati and Rajasthani He is also famous for Jnanasara essence of knowledge and Adhayatmasara essence of spirituality The Lokaprakasa of Vinayavijaya was written in the 17th century CE Srivarddhaeva aka Tumbuluracarya wrote a Kannada commentary on Tattvarthadigama sutra Atmasiddhi Shastra is a spiritual treatise in verse composed in Gujarati by the nineteenth century Jain saint philosopher poet Shrimad Rajchandraji 1867 1901 which comprises 142 verses explaining the fundamental philosophical truths about the soul and its liberation It propounds six fundamental truth on soul which are also known as Satapada six steps The Saman Suttam is a compilation of ancient texts and doctrines recognised by all Jain sects assembled primarily by Jinendra Varni and then examined and approved by monks of different sects and other scholars in 1974 Grammar Jainendra Vyakaraṇa of Acharya Pujyapada and Sakaṭayana vyakaraṇa of Sakaṭayana also called Palyakirti are both works on grammar written in c 9th century CE Pancagranthiby Acarya Buddhisagarasuri 10th century in poetic form complemented with auto commentary Siddha Hema Sabdanusasana by Acharya Hemachandra c 12th century CE is considered by F Kielhorn as the best grammar work of the Indian middle ages Hemacandra s book Kumarapalacaritra is also noteworthy Malayagiri a contemporary to Hemachandra also authored a Sabdanusasana accompanied with an auto commentary Narrative literature and poetry Jaina narrative literature mainly contains stories about sixty three prominent figures known as Salakapurusa and people who were related to them Some of the important works are Harivamshapurana of Jinasena c 8th century CE Vikramarjuna Vijaya also known as Pampa Bharata of Kannada poet named Adi Pampa c 10th century CE Pandavapurana of c 16th century CE MathematicsJain literature covered multiple topics of mathematics around 150 CE including the theory of numbers arithmetical operations geometry operations with fractions simple equations cubic equations bi quadric equations permutations combinations and logarithms LanguagesJains literature exists mainly in Jain Prakrit Sanskrit Marathi Tamil Rajasthani Dhundari Marwari Hindi Gujarati Kannada Malayalam Telugu and more recently in English Jains have contributed to India s classical and popular literature For example almost all early Kannada literature and many Tamil works were written by Jains Some of the oldest known books in Hindi and Gujarati were written by Jain scholars citation needed The first autobiography in the ancestor of Hindi Braj Bhasha is called Ardhakathanaka and was written by a Jain Banarasidasa an ardent follower of Acarya Kundakunda who lived in Agra Many Tamil classics are written by Jains or with Jain beliefs and values as the core subject Practically all the known texts in the Apabhramsha language are Jain works citation needed The oldest Jain literature is in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit and the Jain Prakrit the Jain Agamas Agama Tulya the Siddhanta texts etc Many classical texts are in Sanskrit Tattvartha Sutra Puranas Kosh Sravakacara mathematics Nighantus etc Abhidhana Rajendra Kosha written by Acharya Rajendrasuri is only one available Jain encyclodaedic dictionary to understand the technical Jain terms in Ardhamagadhi Prakrit and other languages with specific reference to Jain literature citation needed Jain literature was written in Apabhraṃsa Kahas rasas and grammars Standard Hindi Chhahadhala Moksh Marg Prakashak and others Tamil Nalaṭiyar Civaka Cintamani Valayapathi and others and Kannada Vaddaradhane and various other texts Jain versions of the Ramayana and Mahabharata are found in Sanskrit the Prakrits Apabhraṃsa and Kannada citation needed Jain Prakrit is a term loosely used for the language of the Jain Agamas canonical texts The books of Jainism were written in the popular vernacular dialects as opposed to Sanskrit and therefore encompass a number of related dialects Chief among these is Ardha Magadhi which due to its extensive use has also come to be identified as the definitive form of Prakrit Other dialects include versions of Maharashtri and Sauraseni Influence on Indian literatureMangulam inscription dated 2nd century BCE Parts of the Sangam literature in Tamil are attributed to Jains The authenticity and interpolations are controversial because it presents Hindu ideas Some scholars state that the Jain portions were added about or after the 8th century CE and are not ancient Tamil Jain texts such as the Civaka Cintamaṇi and Nalaṭiyar are credited to Digambara Jain authors These texts have seen interpolations and revisions For example it is generally accepted now that the Jain nun Kanti inserted a 445 verse poem into Civaka Cintamaṇi in the 12th century The Tamil Jain literature according to Dundas has been lovingly studied and commented upon for centuries by Hindus as well as Jains The themes of two of the Tamil epics including the Silapadikkaram have an embedded influence of Jainism Jain scholars also contributed to Kannada literature The Digambara Jain texts in Karnataka are unusual in having been written under the patronage of kings and regional aristocrats They describe warrior violence and martial valor as equivalent to a fully committed Jain ascetic setting aside Jainism s absolute non violence Jain manuscript libraries called bhandaras inside Jain temples are the oldest surviving in India Jain libraries including the Svetambara collections at Patan Gujarat and Jaiselmer Rajasthan and the Digambara collections in Karnataka temples have a large number of well preserved manuscripts These include Jain literature and Hindu and Buddhist texts Almost all have been dated to about or after the 11th century CE The largest and most valuable libraries are found in the Thar Desert hidden in the underground vaults of Jain temples These collections have witnessed insect damage and only a small portion have been published and studied by scholars List of Jain textsDigambara texts The Ratna Karanda SravakacharaShatkhandagama Acharya Pushpadant Acharya Bhutabali Samaysar Acharya Kundkund Niyamasara Acharya Kundkund Pravachansara Acharya Kundkund Ashtapahud Acharya Kundkund Panchastikaya Acharya Kundkund Rayansara Acharya Kundkund Dash Bhakti Acharya Kundkund Varsanuvekkha Acharya Kundkund Tattvartha Sutra Acharya Umaswami Aptamimansa Acharya Samantabhadra Swayambhu Stotra Acharya Samantabhadra Ratnakaranda Sravakachar Acharya Samantabhadra Stuti Vidya Acharya Samantabhadra Yuktyanushasana Acharya Samantabhadra Tattvasara Acharya Devsena Aradhana Saar Acharya Devsen Aalap Paddhati Acharya Devsen Darshansara Acharya Devsena Bhavasangrah Acharya Devsen Laghu Nayachakra Acharya Devsen Ishtopadesh Acharya Pujyapad Devanandi Samadhi Tantra Acharya Pujyapada Devanandi Sarvarthasiddhi Acharya Pujyapad Devanandi Vaidyaka Shastra Acharya Pujyapada Devanandi Siddhipriya Stotra Acharya Pujyapad Devanandi Jainendra Vyakaran Acharya Pujyapada Devanandi Paramatma Prakash Acharya Yogindu Dev Yogasara Acharya Yogindu Dev Naukar Shravakacharya Acharya Yogindu Dev Tattvartha Tika Acharya Yogindu Dev Amritashiti Acharya Yogindu Dev Subhashit Tantra Acharya Yogindu Dev Adhyatma Sandoha Acharya Yogindu Dev Sanmati Sutra Acharya Siddhasena Divakar Kalyan Mandir Acharya Siddhasen Diwakar Ashtashati Acharya Akalankadeva Laghiyastraya Acharya Akalankadeva Nyayavinischaya Savrtti Acharya Akalankadeva Siddhivinischaya Savrtti Acharya Akalankadeva Praman Sangrah Savritti Acharya Akalankdev Tattvartha Rajavartika Acharya Akalankadeva Harivansh Purana Acharya Jinsen first Adi Purana Acharya Jinsen Uttarpuran Acharya Gunbhadra Aatmanushasan Acharya Gunbhadra Ashtasahastri Acharya Vidyananda Sloka Vartika Acharya Vidyananda Aaptpareeksha Acharya Vidyananda Pramanpareeksha Acharya Vidyananda Patra Pareeksha Acharya Vidyanand Kshatriyachudamani Acharya Vadibhasingh Suri Gadyachintamani Acharya Vadibhasingh Suri Kartikeya Anupreksha Acharya Kartikeya Swami Tattvarthasara Acharya Amritchand PurusharthasiddhiUpaya Acharya Amritchandra Atmakhyati Tika Acharya Amritchandra Laghutatvasphot Acharya Amritchandra Tattvapradipika Tika Acharya Amritchandra Varang Charitra Shri Jata Singh Nandi Chandraprabha Charitra Acharya Veeranandi Kashay Pahud Acharya Gundhar Gommatasara Acharya Nemichandra Siddhanta Chakravarti Pashanahchariu Sage Padmakirti Triloksara Acharya Nemichandran Siddhant Chakraborty Labdhisar Acharya Nemichandran Siddhant Chakraborty Kshapanasar Acharya Nemichandran Siddhant Chakraborty Tiloyapannatti Acharya Yativrishabha Jambudvipa Pannatti Acharya Yativrishabha Dhawala Tika Acharya Veersen Yashstilak Champu Acharya Somdev Nitivakyamrit Acharya Somdev Adhyatmatarangini Acharya Somdev Siddhivinischaya Tika Brihad Anantavirya Pramanasamgrahabhashya Brihad Anantavirya Shaktayana Shabdanushasana Acharya Shaktayana Kevali Bhukti Acharya Shaktayana Laghu Dravya Sangrah Acharya Nemichand Vihad Dravya Sangrah Acharya Nemichandra Prameya Kamal Martand Acharya Prabhachandra Nyay Kumudchandra Acharya Prabhachandra Tattvartha vrittipada vivaranam Acharya Prabhachandra Shaktayan Nyas Acharya Prabhachandra Shabdambhoj Bhaskar Acharya Prabhachandra Gadyakathakosh Acharya Prabhachandra Pradyumnacharitra Acharya Mahasena Bhaktamar Strotra Acharya Mantung Padmanandi Panchavinshatika Acharya Padmanandi II Mulachara Swami of Acharya Vattaker Gyanarnav Shubhachandracharya ji Bhagavati Aradhana Acharya Shivarya Shivkoti Amitgati Sravakacharya Acharya Amitgati Dharma Pariksha Acharya Amitgati Subhashit Ratna Sandoh Acharya Amitgati Tattva Bhavana Acharya Amitgati Panch Sangrah Acharya Amitgati Bhavana Dvatrinshatika Acharya Amitgati Niyamasara Tika Acharya Padmaprabhamaladharideva Parsvnath Stotra Acharya Padmaprabhamaladharideva Dharmaamrita Acharya Nayasena Samayasaratatparyavrttitika Acharya Jayasena II Niyamasaratatparyavrttitika Acharya Jayasena II Panchastikayatatparyavrttitika Acharya Jayasena II Tattvanushasana Acharya Ramsen Prameyaratnamala Acharya Laghu Anantavirya Siddhantsaar Acharya Narendrasen Pariksamukha Acharya Manikyanandi Nyayadipika Acharya Dharmabhushan Yeti Dravya Prakash Nayachakra Acharya Mayil Dhawal Padma Purana Acharya Ravishena Mulachara Swami Acharya Vattaker Ganitasar Sangrah Acharya Mahavir Shripal Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Shantinath Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Vardhaman Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Mallinath Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Yashodhar Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Dhanyakumar Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Sukmal Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Sudarshan Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Jambuswamy Charitra Acharya Sakalkirti Mulachar Pradeep Acharya Sakalkirti Parsvnath Purana Acharya Sakalkirti Siddhantasar Deepak Acharya Sakalkirti Tattvarthasara Deepak Acharya Sakalkirti Agamasara Acharya Sakalkirti Meru Mandir Purana Sri Vamana Muni Ji Praman Granth Acharya Vajranandi Chaubisi Purana Acharya Shubhachandra Shrenik Charitra Acharya Shubhachandra Sri Pandava Purana Acharya Shubhachandra Sri Shrenik Charitra Acharya Shubhachandra Chandraprabha Charitra Acharya Shubhachandra Karakandu Charitra Acharya Shubhachandra Chandana Charitra Acharya Shubhchandra Jivandhar Charitr Acharya Shubhachandra Adhyatmatarangini Acharya Shubhachandra Prakrit Lakshan Acharya Shubhachandra Ganitasar Sangrah Acharya Sridhar Trilokasaratika Acharya Madhavachand Yogasara Praabhrit Acharya Amitgati Brihatkathakosha Acharya Harisena Aradhanasar Acharya Ravibhadra Acharsar Acharya Veeranandi Vardhaman Charitra Acharya Asag Sudansana Chariu Acharya Nayanandi Ekibhav Stotra Acharya Vadiraj Puransar collection Acharya Srichand Vasunandi Sravakacharya Acharya Vasunandi Bhavana Paddhati Acharya Padmanandi Angar Dharmaamrita Pandit Ashadhar Sagar Dharmamrit Pandit Ashadhar Bharatesh Vaibhav Mahakavi Ratnakar ji Samaysar Natak Pandit Banarsidas Brahma Vilas Bhaiya Bhagwatidas Chhadhala Pandit Dyantarai Kriya Kosh Pandit Daulatram first Bhav Deepika Pandit Deepchand Chid Vilas Pandit Deepchand Parshva Purana Pandit Bhudhardas Jin Shatak Pandit Bhudhardas Mokshamarg Prakashak Pandit Todermal Gommatasara Tika Pandit Todarmal Labdhisar Tika Pandit Todermal Kshapanasar Tika Pandit Todermal Triloksar Tika Pandit Todermal Purusharthsiddhiupayetika Pandit Todermal Jain Siddhanta Praveshika Pandit Gopaldasji Baraiya Chhadhala Pt Daulatramji II Ratnakaranda Vachanika Pt Sadasukhdas Samaysar Vachanika Pt Jaichand Chavda Chhadhala Pandit Budhajan Mahavirashtak Stotra Pandit Bhagchand Jainendra Siddhanta Kosha Kshullaka Jinendra VarnShvetambara texts Agamas are the main scriptures followed by Jains as preached by Tirthankars Both Shwetambar and Digambar sects believe in 12 Agamas Both also believe that the 12th Agama Drishtivaad Dṛṣṭivada was lost over a period of time and realised the need to turn the oral tradition to written While Digambaras believed that all the 12 Agamas were lost Shwetambars believed that the first 11 Agamas were not lost They compiled them in written format in the 6th century CE in Vallabhi Gujarat The list is as follows Agamas There are 45 Agamas 11 Anga Agamas and 34 Anga Bahya Agamas 11 Anga Agamas Ayaraṃga Sanskrit Acaranga meaning On monastic conduct Suyagaḍa Sutrakṛtanga On heretical systems and views Ṭhaṇaṃga Sthananga On different points of the teaching Samavayaṃga Samavayanga On rising numerical groups Viyaha pannatti Bhagavai Vyakhya prajnapti or Bhagavati Exposition of explanations or the holy one Naya dhamma kahao Jnata dharmakathanga Parables and religious stories Uvasaga dasao Upasaka dasaḥ Ten chapters on the Jain lay follower Aṇuttarovavaiya dasao Antakṛd dasaḥ Ten chapters on those who put an end to rebirth in this very life Anuttaraupapatikadasah Anuttaropapatika dasaḥ Ten chapters on those who were reborn in the uppermost heavens Paṇha vagaraṇa Prasna vyakaraṇa Questions and explanations Vivaga suya Vipakasruta Bad or good results of deeds performed 34 Anga Bahya Agamas The 34 Anga Bahya Agamas consist of 12 Upanga Agamas 6 Cheda sutras 6 Mula sutras and 10 Paiṇṇaya sutras Upanga Agamas Uvavaiya sutta Sanskrit Aupapatika sutra Places of rebirth Raya paseṇaijja or Rayapaseṇiya Raja prasniya Questions of the king Jivajivabhigama Jivajivabhigama Classification of animate and inanimate entities Pannavaṇa Prajnapana Enunciation on topics of philosophy and ethics Suriya pannatti Surya prajnapti Exposition on the sun Jambudvipa pannatti Jambudvipa prajnapti Exposition on the Jambu continent and the Jain universe Canda pannatti Candra prajnapti Exposition on the moon and the Jain universe Nirayavaliyao or Kappiya Narakavalika Series of stories on characters reborn in hells Kappavaḍaṃsiao Kalpavataṃsikaḥ Series of stories on characters reborn in the kalpa heavens Pupphiao Puṣpikaḥ Flowers refers to one of the stories Puppha culiao Puṣpa culikaḥ The nun Puṣpacula Vaṇhi dasao Vṛṣṇi dasah Stories on characters from the legendary dynasty known as Andhaka Vṛṣṇi Cheda sutras texts relating to the conduct and behaviour of monks and nuns Ayara dasao Sanskrit Acaradasah Ten chapters about monastic conduct chapter 8 is the famed Kalpa sutra Biha Kappa Bṛhat Kalpa Great Religious code Vavahara Vyavahara Procedure Nisiha Nisitha Interdictions Jiya kappa Jita kalpa Customary rules Maha nisiha Maha nisitha Large Nisitha Mula sutras Fundamental texts which are foundational works studied by new monastics Dasaveyaliya sutta Sanskrit Dasavaikalika sutra this is memorized by all new Jain mendicants Uttarajjhayaṇa sutta Uttaradhyayana sutra Avassaya sutta Avasyaka sutra Piṇḍa nijjutti and Ogha nijjutti Piṇḍa niryukti and Ogha niryukti Culikasutras appendixes Nandi sutra discusses the five types of knowledge Anuyogadvara sutra a technical treatise on analytical methods discusses Anekantavada Paiṇṇaya sutras Sanskrit Prakirnaka sutras Miscellaneous Cau saraṇa Sanskrit Catuḥsaraṇa The four refuges Aura paccakkhaṇa Atura pratyakhyana Sick man s renunciation Bhatta parinna Bhakta parijna Renunciation of food Saṃtharaga Saṃstaraka Straw bed Tandula veyaliya Taṇḍula vaicarika Reflection on rice grains Canda vejjhaya Candravedhyaka Hitting the mark Devinda tthaya Devendra stava Praise of the kings of gods Gaṇi vijja Gaṇi vidya A Gaṇi s knowledge Maha paccakkhaṇa Maha pratyakhyana Great renunciation Vira tthava Vira stava Great renunciation Major scriptures by acharyas Major scriptures by Acharya Umaswati 1st 2nd Century CE Tattvartha Sutra On the Nature artha of Reality tattva Prasamarati guide for the aspirant on the path of peace and liberation from karmic bondage Major scriptures by Acharya Vimalsuri 3rd Century CE Paumchariya Jain Ramayan Major scriptures by Acharya Haribhadrasuri 8th Century CE Anekantajayapataka The Victory Banner of Anekantavada Relativism which puts forward arguments about Anekantavada Anekantavadapravesa discusses Jain Philosophy Anekantasiddhi establishes the concept of non absolutism anekanta Atmasiddhi Realization of Self a work about the Soul Upadesapada collection of stories which depicts how difficult it is to secure a human birth Daṃsaṇasuddhi text deals with Samyagdarsana right faith and its purity Darisaṇasattari another work on Samyagdarsana Dhammasangahaṇi work on Dharma Lokatattvanirṇaya a work of comparative religion where he talks about Hindu Gods Saṃsaradavanalastuti a work praising Thirtankaras Samaraiccakaha a collection of stories Sambohapayaraṇa a work on philosophy Ashtakaprakarana The Eightfold Explanation Dharmabindu which outlines the duties of the laity outlines rules for mendicants and describes the bliss of moksha Dhurtakhyana The Rogue s Stories Pancasaka a Prakrit work on rituals and spiritual matters Ṣaḍdarsanasamuccaya Compendium of Six Philosophies which compares Jainism with other schools of Indian philosophy Samaraiccakaha The Story of Samaraicca a narrative which outlines the effects of karma in a story about the enmity of its characters which endures over several reincarnations Sastravartasamuccaya The Array of Explanatory Teachings Yogabindu The Seeds of Yoga a work on yoga Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya An Array of Views on Yoga another work on yoga Yogasataka a third work on yoga In these three volumes he compares the yoga of Jainism with the other varieties of yoga prevalent in India at the time Parisiṣṭaparvan Sthaviravali Siddha Hema Sabdanusasana grammar Abhidhan Chintamani lexicon Arhanniti a work on politics from a Jain perspective Kavyanusasana a work on poetics Chandonusasana a work on prosody Pramaṇa mimaṁsa epistemology Vitaraga Stotra Desi Namamala lexicon of non Sanskrit origin words Nighaṇṭuseṣa botanical lexicon Major scriptures by Acharya 15th Century AD Siri Sirivala Kaha Sraddha Vidhi Prakaraṇa Major scriptures by Mahopadhyaya Yashovijaya 17th Century AD Ashtasahasri Tatparyavivarana Tika Adhyatmasara Adhyatmopanisatprakarana Dharmapariksa Jaina Nyayakhandakhadya Jaina Tarkabhasa Jnanasara Commentary on Jnanarnava Shripal raja no RasOthers This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2019 Yogasastra Siddha Hema Sabdanusasana Trishashthi Shalaka Purusha Charitra Bhadrabahu Samhita Jnanarnava or the Yogapradipadhikara Pramana mimansa logic Texts claimed by both the sects Tattvartha Sutra first Jain text written in SanskritOther texts Ajitha purana Antakrddaasah Aupapatika Anuttaraupapatikadasah Atma Siddhi Aupapatika Bahuriband Civaka Cintamaṇi Drstivada Jnatrdharmakathah Kalpa Sutra Lilavatisara Lokavibhaga Nalaṭiyar Neelakesi Nishitha Nivvaṇalilavaikaha Palamozhi Naanuru Prasnavyakaranani Purvas Samavayanga Sutra Acaranga Sutra Shantinatha Charitra Silappatikaram Sirupanchamoolam Sthananga Sutra Sutrakritanga Upasakadasah Vaddaradhane Valayapathi Varangacharita Vikramarjuna Vijaya Vipakasruta VyakhyaprajnaptiSee alsoLiterature portalChampat Rai Jain A N Upadhye Bal Patil Agama Hinduism Agama Buddhism ReferencesCitations von Glasenapp 1925 pp 109 110 Champat Rai Jain 1929b p 135 Champat Rai Jain 1929b p 136 Dundas 2002 pp 60 61 Dundas 2002 p 61 Natubhai Shah 2004 pp 39 40 Vijay K Jain 2012 p xi Winternitz 1972 p 427 Nagendra Kr Singh 2001 Encyclopedia of Jainism Edited by Nagendra Kr Singh New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 81 261 0691 3 page 4308 Yoga The Indian Tradition Edited by Ian Whicher and David Carpenter London Routledgecurzon 2003 ISBN 0 7007 1288 7 page 64 C Chappie 1993 Nonviolence to Animals Earth and Self in Asian Traditions Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 1497 3 page 5 Bronkhorst Johannes The Formative Period of Jainism c 500 BCE 200 CE PDF Brill s Encyclopedia of Jainism Online Denison University University of Edinburgh University of Bergen University of California Berkeley John E Cort Paul Dundas Knut A Jacobsen Kristi L Wiley doi 10 1163 2590 2768 BEJO COM 047082 Melton amp Baumann 2010 p 1553 Jacobi Hermann 1884 F Max Muller ed The Acaranga Sutra Sacred Books of the East vol 22 Part 1 Oxford The Clarendon Press ISBN 0 7007 1538 X p xlii Natubhai Shah 2004 p 40 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 112 113 Upinder Singh 2016 p 444 Vijay K Jain 2016 p xii Jaini 1998 p 78 81 von Glasenapp 1925 p 124 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 121 122 Suryaprajnapti Sutra The Schoyen Collection Archived from the original on 15 June 2017 Upinder Singh 2016 p 26 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 110 111 Balbir Nalini Svetambara canon JAINpedia Winternitz 1972 pp 428 430 Burgess Jas 1888 Indian antiquary a journal of oriental research vol 17 Balbir Nalini Prakirṇaka sutras JAINpedia Balbir Nalini Digambara canon JAINpedia Vijay K Jain 2012 p xii Sagarmal Jain Shreeprakash Pandey 1998 Jainism in a Global Perspective p 239 Collection of Jain papers of 1993 Parliament of World Religions Chicago Parshwanath Vidyapith Pubs Dundas 2002 p 80 Vijay K Jain 2012 p xi xii Jaini 1927 p 5 Jaini 1991 p 32 33 Finegan 1989 p 221 Balcerowicz 2003 pp 25 34 Chatterjee 2000 p 282 283 Jones amp Ryan 2007 pp 439 440 Umasvati 1994 p xi xiii Quote That Which Is known as the Tattvartha Sutra to Jains is recognized by all four Jain traditions as the earliest most authoritative and comprehensive summary of their religion Dundas 2006 pp 395 396 Umasvati 1994 p xiii Johnson 1995 pp 46 51 91 96 Qvarnstrom Olle Jainism and Early Buddhism Essays in Honor of Padmanabh S Jaini page 154 Jaini 1998 p 85 Hartmut Scharfe 1977 Grammatical Literature Deshpande Madhav M 1975 Non Paṇinian Grammars on Savarṇa Critical Studies in Indian Grammarians I The Theory of Homogeneity Savar ya University of Michigan Press pp 109 126 doi 10 3998 mpub 19360 15 ISBN 978 0 89148 052 5 retrieved 2 March 2025 Bollee Willem 2006 Review of Pancagranthi Vyakaraṇa of Buddhisagarsuri A Critical Edition B L Series 18 Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde Sudasiens Vienna Journal of South Asian Studies 50 211 212 ISSN 0084 0084 Kielhorn F 1888 A brief account of Hemachandras Sanskrit Grammar Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes 2 18 24 ISSN 0084 0076 Board Pratiyogita Darpan Editorial Pratiyogita Darpan Extra Issue Series 3 Indian History Upkar Prakashan Barodia U D 1909 History and Literature of Jainism Jain Graduates Association Gheverghese 2016 p 23 Banerjee Satya Ranjan 2005 Prolegomena to Prakritica et Jainica The Asiatic Society p 61 Jaina Sutras Part II SBE45 Index sacred texts com Retrieved 2 March 2025 Jaina Sutras Part II SBE45 Index sacred texts com Retrieved 2 March 2025 Clark Walter Eugene 1924 Magadhi and Ardhamagadhi Journal of the American Oriental Society 44 81 121 doi 10 2307 593543 ISSN 0003 0279 Cush Robinson amp York 2012 pp 515 839 Zvelebil 1992 pp 13 16 Cort 1998 p 163 Dundas 2002 p 116 117 Zvelebil 1992 pp 37 38 Spuler 1952 pp 24 25 context 22 27 Cort 1998 p 164 Dundas 2002 pp 118 120 Dundas 2002 p 83 Guy John January 2012 Jain Manuscript Painting The Metropolitan Museum of Art Heilburnn Timeline of Art History archived from the original on 2 April 2013 retrieved 25 April 2013 Dundas 2002 pp 83 84 Jain Vijay K 2021 Acarya Manikyanandi s Pariksamukha Sutra आच र य म ण क यनन द व रच त पर क ष म ख स त र Dehradun Vikalp Printers ISBN 978 81 932726 9 5 Sources Balcerowicz Piotr 2003 Essays in Jaina Philosophy and Religion Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1977 1 Chatterjee Asim Kumar 2000 A Comprehensive History of Jainism From the Earliest Beginnings to AD 1000 Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 978 81 215 0931 2 Cort John E ed 1998 Open Boundaries Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 3785 8 Cort John E 2010 1953 Framing the Jina Narratives of Icons and Idols in Jain History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 538502 1 Cush Denise Robinson Catherine York Michael 2012 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 18978 5 Dalal Roshen 2010 2006 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin books ISBN 978 0 14 341517 6 Dundas Paul 2002 1992 The Jains 2nd ed London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 26605 5 Dundas Paul 2006 Olivelle Patrick ed Between the Empires Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977507 1 Finegan Jack 1989 An Archaeological History of Religions of Indian Asia Paragon House ISBN 978 0 913729 43 4 Gheverghese Joseph George 2016 Indian Mathematics Engaging With The World From Ancient To Modern Times World Scientific ISBN 9781786340603 Jain Champat Rai 1929 Risabha Deva The Founder of Jainism Allahabad The Indian Press Limited This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Jain Champat Rai 1929 The Practical Dharma The Indian Press Ltd This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain 2011 Acharya Umasvami s Tattvarthsutra 1st ed Uttarakhand ISBN 978 81 903639 2 1 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain 2012 Acharya Amritchandra s Purushartha Siddhyupaya Realization of the Pure Self With Hindi and English Translation ISBN 978 81 903639 4 5 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Jain Vijay K 2016 Acarya Samantabhadra s Ratnakarandaka sravakacara The Jewel casket of Householder s Conduct ISBN 978 81 903639 9 0 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Jaini Jagmandar lal 1927 Gommatsara Jiva kanda Alt URL Jaini Padmanabh S 1991 Gender and Salvation Jaina Debates on the Spiritual Liberation of Women University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06820 9 Jaini Padmanabh S 1998 1979 The Jaina Path of Purification Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1578 0 Johnson W J 1995 Harmless Souls Karmic Bondage and Religious Change in Early Jainism with Special Reference to Umasvati and Kundakunda Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1309 0 Jones Constance Ryan James D 2007 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 5458 9 Melton J Gordon Baumann Martin eds 2010 Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices Vol One A B 2nd ed ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 204 3 Shah Natubhai 2004 First published in 1998 Jainism The World of Conquerors vol I Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1938 2 Singh Upinder 2016 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education ISBN 978 93 325 6996 6 Spuler Bertold 1952 Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill ISBN 978 90 04 04190 5 Umasvati Umaswami 1994 That which is Translator Nathmal Tatia Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 06 068985 8 von Glasenapp Helmuth 1925 Jainism An Indian Religion of Salvation Der Jainismus Eine Indische Erlosungsreligion trans Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Reprint 1999 ISBN 978 81 208 1376 2 Winternitz Maurice 1972 A History of Indian Literature Vol II Buddhist Literature and Jaina Literature 2nd ed University of Calcutta Zvelebil Kamil 1992 Companion Studies to the History of Tamil Literature Brill Academic ISBN 978 90 04 09365 2Further readingRishabhanatha inEncyclopaedia Britannica Editors of the Encyclopaedia Britannica 2010 Dalal Roshen 2010 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 Dalal Roshen 2010 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin books ISBN 978 0 14 341517 6 Stevenson John 1848 The Kalpa Sutra and Nava Tatva tr from Magadhi Bernard Quaritch London Thomas Edward 1877 Jainism London Trubner amp co Jacobi Hermann 1884 Jaina Sutras Part I Akaranga Sutra amp Kalpa Sutra Oxford The Clarendon press Jacobi Hermann 1884 Jaina Sutras Part II Uttaradhyayana Sutra amp Sutrakritanga Sutra Oxford The Clarendon press Stevenson Sinclair 1915 The Heart of Jainism H Milford Oxford University Press M S Ramaswami Ayyangar B Seshagiri Rao 1922 Studies in South Indian Jainism Premier Press MadrasJain texts Bibliography of Sanskrit and Prakrit Jain texts primary sources from Dundas 2002 Haribhadra Anekantajayapataka ed H R Kapadia 2 vols Baroda 1940 and 1947 Asadhara Anagaradharmamṛta ed K Shastri New Delhi 1975 Jinasena Adipuraṇa ed Pannalal Jain 2 vols Kashi 1964 and 1965 Acaraṅgasutra with Silaṅka s commentary in Muni Jambuvijaya ed Acaraṅgasutram and Sutrakṛtaṅgasutram re edition of Agamodaya Samiti edition Delhi 1978 Haribhadra Aṣṭakaprakaraṇa Ahmedabad 1918 Uvavaiya Suttam ed G Lalwani with English trans by K C Lalwani Jaipur 1988 Jinadasa Avasyakacurṇi 2 vols Ratlam 1928 and 1929 Bhadrabahu Avasyakaniryukti with Haribhadra s commentary reprint of Agamodaya Samiti edition vol 1 Bombay 1981 Avasyakasutra in Dasaveyaliyasuttaṃ Uttarajjhayaṇaiṃand Avassayasuttaṃ ed Muni Puṇyavijaya and A M Bhojak Jaina Agama Series 15 Bombay 1977 Viyahapaṇṇatti Bhagavai in Pupphabhikkhu ed Suttagame vol 1 Gurgaon 1953 Sivarya Bhagavati Aradhana with Aparajita Suri s commentary ed K Siddhantashastri Sholapur 1978 Siddhicandra Bhanucandragaṇicarita ed M D Desai Ahmedabad Calcutta 1941 Hariṣeṇa Bṛhatkathakoṣa ed A N Upadhye Bombay 1943 Silaṅka Cauppannamahapurisacariyaṃ ed A M Bhojak Varanasi 1961 Haribhadra ed A N Upadhye Bombay 1944 Udayaprabha Suri ed Muni Caturavijaya and Muni Puṇyavijaya Bombay 1949 Jayasiṃha Suri ed P L B Gandhi Bombay 1940 Bhaskaranandi ed S Ohira New Delhi 1973 Devasena ed A N Upadhye Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Institute 15 1935 198 206 Siddhasena Divakara in A N Upadhye 1971 ed E Leumann and trans W Schubring in Schubring 1977 Jinadatta Suri ed Gandhi Three Apabhraṃsa Works Jinabhadra ed and trans E A Solomon Ahmedabad 1966 Punnata Jinasena Harivaṃsapuraṇa ed P Jain Kashi 1962 Isibhasiyaiṃ A Jaina Text of Early Period ed W Schubring Ahmedabad 1974 Subhacandra Jnanarṇava ed H L Jain Kailashchandra Siddhantacharya and A N Upadhye Sholapur 1977 Jnatadharmakathaḥ in Pupphabhikkhu ed Suttagame vol 1 Gurgaon 1953 Yasovijaya ed G P Shah Bombay 1986 vol 1 Bombay 1928 Svamikumara ed A N Upadhye Agas 1978 Jinapala ed Muni Jinavijaya Bombay 1956 ed Muni Jinavijaya Calcutta 1932 ed Pannalal Sahityacarya Phaltan 1970 Jinesvara Suri ed Muni Jinavijaya Bombay 1949 Guṇadhara Kaṣayapahuḍa with Virasena s Jayadhavala commentary vol 1 ed Phulcandra Mahendrakumar and Kailashcandra Mathura 1974 Bhadrabahu Kalpasutra ed H Jacobi Leipzig 1879 Haribhadra ed Muni Bhanuvijaya Ahmedabad 1963 Mulacara ed K Shastri J Shastri and P Jain 2 vols New Delhi 1984 and 1986 Pradyumna Suri with Devacandra Suri s commentary vol 1 ed A M Bhojak Ahmedabad 1971 with bhaṣya and curṇi ed Amaramuni and Muni Kanhaiyalal 4 vols Agra 1957 60 Kundakunda Niyamasara ed and trans U Sain Lucknow 1931 Prabhacandra ed M K Jain Bombay 1941 Kakka Suri Nabhinandanajinoddharaprabandha ed B Harakchand Ahmedabad 1928 ed Muni Puṇyavijaya D Malvania and A M Bhojak Jaina Agama Series 1 Bombay 1968 Devavacaka with Haribhadra s commentary ed Muni Puṇyavijaya Varanasi Ahmedabad 1966 Raviṣeṇa ed P Jain 3 vols Kashi 1958 9 Hemacandra or Parisiṣṭaparvan ed H Jacobi Calcutta 1883 trans Fynes 1998 Yogindu ed A N Upadhye Bombay 1937 Prabhacandra Prabhavakacarita ed Jinavijaya Ahmedabad Calcutta 1940 Part 1 ed Muni Puṇyavijaya and Amritlal Mohanlal Bhojak Jaina Agama Series 17 1 Bombay 1984 Dharmasagara Surat 1937 ed Jinavijaya Shantiniketan 1936 ed Muni Punyavijaya D Malvania and A M Bhojak Jaina Agama Series 9 2 Bombay 1971 Kundakunda Pravacanasara with Amṛtacandra s commentary ed A N Upadhye Bombay 1935 in Pupphabhikkhu ed Suttagame vol 2 Gurgaon 1954 Samavayaṅgasutram in Muni Jambuvijaya ed Sthanaṅga Sutram and Samavayaṅga Sutram with Abhayadeva Suri s commentary re edition of Agamodaya Samiti Series edition Delhi 1985 Haribhadra ed H Jacobi Calcutta 1926 Sutrakṛtaṅgasutram in Muni Jambuvijaya ed Acaraṅgasutram and Sutrakṛtaṅgam with Silaṅka s commentary re edition of Agamodaya Samiti Series edition Delhi 1978 Ṣaṭkhaṇḍagama vols 2 and 3 ed H Jain A N Upadhye and K Siddhantashastri Sholapur 1976 and 1980 pt 2 ed Muni Jambuvijaya Bombay 1977 Sakaṭayana ed Muni Jambuvijaya Bhavnagar 1974 Jinavallabha Suri in Gandhi Three Apabhraṃsa Works ed P Soni Bombay 1920 Indranandi in M Shastri ed Bombay 1918 Samayasundara Surat 1939 Kundakunda Samayasara text trans and comm by A Chakravarti Banaras 1930 Sthanaṅgasutram in Muni Jambuvijaya ed Sthanaṅga Sutram and Samavayaṅga Sutram with Abhayadeva Suri s commentary re edition of Agamodaya Samiti Series edition Delhi 1985 Anantavirya ed M K Jain Varanasi 1959 Dharmasagara ed Muni Labhasagara Kapadvanj 1961 Umasvati Tattvarthasutra in Sanghvi S 1974 Pt Sukhlalji s Commentary on Tattvarthasutra of Vacaka Umasvati trans K K Dixit Ahmedabad Akalaṅka ed Mahendrakumar 2 vols Kashi 1953 and 1957 Upasakadasaḥ text and trans in Hoernle A F R 1890 The Uvasagadasao or the Religious Experience of an Uvasaga Calcutta Uttaradhyayanasutra in Pupphabhikkhu ed Suttagame vol 2 Gurgaon 1954 Asaga ed P Jain Sholapur 1974 Saṅghadasa ed Muni Caturavijaya and Muni Puṇyavijaya Gandhinagar 1989 Jinabhadra ed D Malvania 3 vols Ahmedabad 1966 8 Hemavijaya ed Hargovinddas and Bechardas Benares 1911 Jinaprabha Suri ed Muni Jinavijaya Bombay 1941 in Pupphabhikkhu ed Suttagame vol 1 Gurgaon 1953 Jinaprabha Suri Vividhatirthakalpa ed Muni Jinavijaya Shantiniketan 1934 Bhavasena ed V Johrapurkar Sholapur 1964 Haribhadra ed and trans K K Dixit Ahmedabad 1968 Haribhadra Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya ed and trans K K Dixit Ahmedabad 1970 Hemacandra Yogasastra ed Muni Jambuvijaya 3 vols Bombay 1977 86 External linksJainism books Wisdom Library Jain eLibrary Online collection of Jain Literature Jain Quantum Jain Literature Search Engine Jain Shastras Jain Agams JainWorld com Archived from the original on 14 February 2015 Clay Sanskrit Library Archived 7 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Sacred texts Jainism The British Library Archived from the original on 12 July 2023 Retrieved 9 October 2019