Mahavira (), also known by his birth name Vardhamana (), was an Indian religious reformer and spiritual leader who is considered by Jains to be the 24th and final Tirthankara (Supreme Preacher) of this Jain cosmology in Jainism. He is believed by historians to have lived in the 6th or 5th century BCE, reviving and reforming an earlier Jain or proto-Jain community which had likely been led by Pārśvanātha, whom Jains consider to be Mahavira's predecessor. Although the dates of Mahavira's life are uncertain and historically reliable information is scarce, and traditional accounts vary by sectarian traditions, the historicity of Mahavira is well-established and not in dispute among scholars.
According to traditional legends and hagiography, Mahavira was born in 599 BCE to a ruling Jain family of the Nāya tribe in what is now Bihar in India. According to traditional sources like the Ācārāṅga Sūtra, the Nāyas were followers of Parshvanatha, Mahavira's predecessor. Mahavira abandoned all worldly possessions at the age of about 30 and left home in pursuit of spiritual awakening, becoming an asceticism. Mahavira practiced intense meditation and severe austerities for twelve and a half years, after which he attained Kevala Jnana (omniscience). He preached for 30 years and attained moksha (liberation) when he died.
Mahavira taught attainment of samyak darshan or self realization ( atma-anubhuti) through the practice of bhedvijnāna, which involves positioning oneself as a pure soul, separate from body, mind and emotions, and being aware of the soul's true nature; and to remain grounded and steadfast in soul's unchanging essence during varying auspicious or inauspicious external circumstances. He also preached that the observance of the vows of ahimsa (non-violence), satya (truth), asteya (non-stealing), brahmacharya (chastity), and aparigraha (non-attachment) are necessary for spiritual liberation. He taught the principles of Anekantavada (many-sided reality): syadvada and nayavada. Mahavira's teachings were compiled by Indrabhuti Gautama (his chief disciple) as the Jain Agamas. The texts, transmitted oral tradition by Jain monks, are believed to have been largely lost by about the 1st century CE.
Mahavira is usually depicted in a Lotus position or Kayotsarga meditative posture, with the symbol of a lion beneath him. His earliest iconography is from archaeological sites in the city of Mathura, and is dated from between the 1st century BCE and the 2nd century CE. His birth is celebrated as Mahavira Janma Kalyanaka while his nirvana (liberation) and attainment of Kevala jnana (omniscience) by Gautama Swami are observed by Jains as Diwali.
Historical Mahavira
Although it is universally accepted by scholars of Jainism that Mahavira lived in ancient India, the year of his birth and additional information of his life are "uncertain and debatable."
Dating
Traditional Jain-accounts
The
Digambara and Śvetāmbara sects give different accounts of Mahavira's life. They agree that Mahavira was born in 599BCE, but according to the Śvetāmbaras he died in 527 BCE, while the Digambaras believe that he died in 510 BCE.
Rapson notes that "The Jains themselves have preserved chronological records concerning Mahavira and the succeeding pontiffs of the Jain church, which may have been begun at a comparatively early date. But it seems quite clear that, at the time when these lists were put into their present form, the real date of Mahavira had already either been forgotten or was at least doubtful."
The Jain-tradition accepts the Vira Nirvana Samvat chronology, which starts in 527BCE. The Vira Nirvana Samvat is based on the Vikram Samvat, which dates from the medieaval period, and starts in 57 or 58 BCE, to which 470 years are added, giving 527 or 528 BCE. According to Rapson, this calculation is based on "a list of kings and dynasties, who are supposed to have reigned between 528 and 58 BCE," and is not reliable, "as it confuses rulers of Ujjain, Magadha, and other kingdoms; and some of these may perhaps have been contemporary, and not successive as they are represented."
The 12th-century Jain scholar Hemachandra placed Mahavira in the 6th-5thcentury BCE.
Scholarly datings
There has been considerable scholarly debate on Mahavira's dates since th 19th century, and various dates have been proposed. While traditional accounts adhere to the timeline that places his birth in 599 BCE and his nirvana in 527 BCE or 510 BCE, "some scholars believe this date to be as much as 100 years early."
On the basis of chronologies in Hemachandra's Pariśiṣṭaparvan, some historians have dated Mahavira's birth to 549 BCE, and his death to 477 or ca. 468-467 BCE.[World Religions Reference Library, Mahavira]
Ultimately, Mahavira's dates depend on the dates for the Buddha, who was a (slightly later) contemporary of Mahavira, which is supported by Buddhist texts. They both lived during the reigns of the kings Bimbisara and Ajatashatru of Magadha. Historians who accept the "Short Chronology" for Gautama Buddha's lifetime (ca. 480-400 BCE), argue that the traditional dates for Mahavira also are too early, by as much as one century, since Mahavira and Buddha were contemporaries. Dundas suggests that Mahavira may have died "around 425 BCE, or a few years after", and Long suggests "c.499-427 BCE" as his approximate lifespan.
Role in Jainism
Jain-accounts: successor
Jains believe that the 23 previous
tirthankaras also espoused Jainism. Mahavira is placed in Parshvanatha's lineage as his spiritual successor and ultimate leader of shraman sangha. According to Dundas, Jains believe that the lineage of Parshvanatha influenced Mahavira. Parshvanatha, as the one who "removes obstacles and has the capacity to save", is a popular icon; his image is the focus of Jain temple devotion. Of the 24
tirthankaras, Jain iconography has celebrated Mahavira and Parshvanatha the most; sculptures discovered at the
Mathura archaeological site have been dated to the 1stcentury BCE.
According to Jain tradition, Parshvanatha was a tirthankara born 273 years before Mahavira, which would mean he lived in about the 9th or 8th century BCE. However, "some scholars have suggested that Pārśvanātha and Mahāvīra were actually closer in time than the tradition claims", and that "Pārśva could not have started his ascetic career before the beginning of the sixth century BC" and "may have passed away only a few decades before Vardhamāna i.e., had started his preaching career".
Scholalrly accounts: reformer
Mahavira is believed by historians to have revived and reformed an earlier Jain or proto-Jain community which had likely been led by Pārśvanātha, whom Jains consider to be Mahavira's predecessor. According to
Moriz Winternitz, Mahavira may be considered a reformer of an existing Jain sect known as
Niganthas (fetter-less) which was mentioned in early Buddhist texts.
Birthplace
According to both secterian text
Uttarapurana and
Kalpa Sūtra, Mahavira was born in Kundagrama in the Kingdom of the Videhas. Kundagrama is said to be located in present-day Bihar, India, although the exact location of Kundagrama within Bihar remains a subject of dispute.
Kundagrama was identified by JP Sharma as a suburb of the city of Vaishali, and because of this, some sources refer to him as Vesālie.
Another potential location of Kundagrāma is the village of Basu Kund, about north of Patna (the capital of Bihar).
Life-course
Mahavira renounced his material wealth and left home when he was twenty-eight, by some accounts, thirty by others, lived an ascetic life for twelve and a half years in which he did not even sit for a time, attained Kevalgyana and then preached Dharma for thirty years. Where he preached has been a subject of disagreement between the two major traditions of Jainism: Śvētāmbara and
Digambara. The place of his nirvana,
Pawapuri in present-day Bihar, is a pilgrimage site for Jains.
Life according to Jain tradition
Sources
Yativṛṣabha's
Tiloya Panatti recounts nearly all the events of Mahavira's life in a form convenient for memorisation. Jinasena's
Mahapurana (which includes the
Ādi purāṇa and
Uttarapurana) was completed by his disciple, Gunabhadra, in the 8thcentury. In the
Uttara-purāṇa, Mahavira's life is described in three
parvans, or sections, (74–76) and 1,818 verses.
Vardhamacharitra is a Sanskrit kāvya poem, written by Asaga in 853 CE, which narrates the life of Mahavira.
The Kalpa Sūtra is a collection of biographies of tirthankaras, notably Parshvanatha and Mahavira. Samavayanga Sutra is a collection of Mahavira's teachings, and the Ācārāṅga Sūtra recounts his asceticism.
Tirthankaras
According to
Jain cosmology, 24
Tirthankaras have appeared on earth; Mahavira is the last
tirthankara of
Avasarpiṇī (the present time cycle). A
tirthankara (ford-maker, saviour or spiritual teacher) signifies the founding of a
tirtha, a passage across the sea of birth-and-death cycles.
Previous births
Mahavira's previous births are recounted in Jain texts such as the
Mahapurana and
Tri-shashti-shalaka-purusha-charitra. Although a soul undergoes countless reincarnations in the transmigratory cycle of
saṃsāra, the birth of a
tirthankara is reckoned from the time he determines the causes of karma and pursues
ratnatraya. Jain texts describe Mahavira's 26 births before his incarnation as a
tirthankara. According to the texts, he was born as
Marichi (the son of Bharata Chakravartin) in a previous life.
Birth
Tirthankara Mahavira was born in Kundagrāma into the royal
Jain family of King Siddhartha of the Nāya tribe and Queen
Trishala of the Licchavi republic.
The Nāyas were kshatriyas and saw themselves as being related to the
. The Ācārāṅga Sūtra informs us that:
According to Jains, Mahavira was born in 599BCE. His birth date falls on the thirteenth day of the rising moon in the month of Chaitra in the Vira Nirvana Samvat calendar era. It falls in March or April of the Gregorian calendar, and is celebrated by Jains as Mahavir Janma Kalyanak.
Kshatriyakund (the place of Mahavira's birth) is traditionally believed to be near Vaishali, an ancient town on the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Its location in present-day Bihar is unclear, partly because of migrations from ancient Bihar for economic and political reasons. According to the "Universal History" in Jain texts, Mahavira underwent many rebirths (total 27 births) before his birth in the 6th-century BCE. They included a denizen of hell, a lion, and a god ( deva) in a heavenly realm just before his last birth as the 24th tirthankara. Svetambara texts state that his embryo first formed in a Bamana woman before it was transferred by Hari-Naigamesin (the divine commander of Indra's army) to the womb of Trishala, Siddhartha's wife. The embryo-transfer legend is not believed by adherents of the Digambara tradition.
Jain texts state that after Mahavira was born, the god Indra came from the heavens along with 56 digkumaries, anointed him, and performed his abhisheka (consecration) on Mount Meru. These events, illustrated in a number of Jain temples, play a part in modern Jain temple rituals. Although the Kalpa Sūtra accounts of Mahavira's birth legends are recited by Svetambara Jains during the annual Paryushana festival, the same festival is observed by the Digambaras without the recitation.
Early life
Mahavira grew up as a prince. According to the second chapter of the Śvētāmbara text Ācārāṅga Sūtra, his parents were lay devotees of
Parshvanatha. The
Handbook of Indian History notes that the
Kalpasutra narrates Pārśva’s liberation 250 years before Mahavira, and mentions that Buddhist literature contains reference to disciples of Parsva in the lifetime of the Buddha.
Jain traditions differ about whether Mahavira married. The Digambara tradition believes that his parents wanted him to marry Yashoda, but he refused to marry. The Śvētāmbara tradition believes that he was married to Yashoda at a young age and had one daughter, Priyadarshana, also called Anojja.
Jain texts portray Mahavira as tall; his height was given as 7 hastas or four (6 feet) in the Aupapatika Sutra. According to Jain texts, he was the shortest of the twenty-four tirthankaras; earlier arihants were believed to have been taller, with Neminatha or Aristanemi —the 22nd tirthankara, who lived for 1,000 years—said to have been sixty-five cubits (98feet) in height.
Renunciation
At age thirty, Mahavira abandoned royal life and left his home and family to live an ascetic life in the pursuit of spiritual awakening. He undertook severe fasts and bodily mortifications, meditated under the
Ashoka tree, and discarded his clothes. The
Ācārāṅga Sūtra has a graphic description of his hardships and self-mortification. According to the
Kalpa Sūtra, Mahavira spent the first forty-two monsoons of his life in Astikagrama,
Champapuri, Prstichampa, Vaishali, Vanijagrama,
Nalanda district, Mithila, Bhadrika, Alabhika, Panitabhumi,
Shravasti, and
Pawapuri. He is said to have lived in
Rajagriha during the rainy season of the forty-first year of his ascetic life, which is traditionally dated to 491BCE.
Omniscience
According to traditional accounts, Mahavira achieved
Kevala Jnana (omniscience, or infinite knowledge) under a
Shorea robusta on the bank of the River Rijuvalika near Jrimbhikagrama at age 43 after twelve years of rigorous penance. The details of the event are described in the Jain
Uttar-purāņa and
Harivamśa-purāņa texts. The
Ācārāṅga Sūtra describes Mahavira as all-seeing. The
Sutrakritanga expands it to all-knowing, and describes his other qualities. Jains believe that Mahavira had a most auspicious body (
paramaudārika śarīra) and was free from eighteen imperfections when he attained omniscience. According to the Śvētāmbara, he traveled throughout India to teach his philosophy for thirty years after attaining omniscience. However, the Digambara believe that he remained in his
Samavasarana and delivered sermons to his followers.
Disciples
Jain texts document eleven Brahmanas as Mahavira's first disciples, traditionally known as the eleven
Ganadharas. Indrabhuti Gautama is believed to have been their leader, the others were named: Agnibhuti, Vayubhuti, Akampita, Arya Vyakta,
Sudharman, Manditaputra, Mauryaputra, Acalabhraataa, Metraya, and Prabhasa. The
Ganadharas are believed to have remembered and to have verbally transmitted Mahavira's teachings after his death. His teachings became known as
Gani-Pidaga, or the Jain
Agamas. According to
Kalpa Sutra, Mahavira had 14,000
sadhus (male ascetic devotees), 36,000
sadhvis (female ascetics), 159,000
sravakas (male lay followers), and 318,000
sravikas (female lay followers). Jain tradition mentions Srenika and Kunika of
Haryanka dynasty (popularly known as
Bimbisara and
Ajatashatru) and
Chetaka of
Videha as his royal followers. Mahavira initiated his
with the
mahavratas (Five Vows). He delivered fifty-five
(recitations) and a set of lectures (
Uttaraadhyayana-sutra). Chandana is believed to be the leader of female monastic order.
Nirvana and moksha
According to Jain texts, Mahavira's
nirvana (death) occurred in the town of
Pawapuri in present-day
Bihar. His life as a spiritual light and the night of his nirvana are commemorated by Jains as Diwali at the same time that Hindus celebrate it. His chief disciple, Gautama, is said to have attained omniscience the night that Mahavira achieved nirvana from Pawapuri.
Accounts of Mahavira's nirvana vary among Jain texts, with some describing a simple nirvana and others recounting grandiose celebrations attended by gods and kings. According to the Jinasena's Mahapurana, heavenly beings arrived to perform his funeral rites. The Pravachanasara of Digambara tradition says that only the nails and hair of tirthankaras are left behind; the rest of the body dissolves in the air like camphor. In some texts Mahavira is described, at age 72, as delivering his final preaching over a six-day period to a large group of people. The crowd falls asleep, awakening to find that he has disappeared (leaving only his nails and hair, which his followers cremate).
The Jain Śvētāmbara tradition believes that Mahavira's nirvana occurred in 527 BCE, and the Digambara tradition holds that date of 510 BCE. In both traditions, his jiva (soul) is believed to abide in Siddhashila (the home of liberated souls). Mahavira's Jal Mandir stands at the place where he is said to have attained nirvana ( moksha). Artworks in Jain temples and texts depict his final liberation and cremation, sometimes shown symbolically as a small pyre of sandalwood and a piece of burning camphor.
Teachings
Colonial-era Indologists considered Jainism (and Mahavira's followers) a sect of
Buddhism because of superficial similarities in iconography and meditative and ascetic practices. As scholarship progressed, differences between the teachings of Mahavira and the Buddha were found so divergent that the religions were acknowledged as separate. Mahavira, says Moriz Winternitz, taught a "very elaborate belief in the soul" (unlike the Buddhists, who denied such elaboration). His ascetic teachings have a higher order of magnitude than those of Buddhism or Hinduism, and his emphasis on
ahimsa (non-violence) is greater than that in other Indian religions.
Agamas
Mahavira's teachings were compiled by Gautama Swami, his
Ganadhara (chief disciple). The canonical scriptures are in twelve parts. Mahavira's teachings were gradually lost after about 300BCE, according to Jain tradition, when a severe famine in the Magadha kingdom dispersed the Jain monks. Attempts were made by later monks to gather, recite the canon, and re-establish it. These efforts identified differences in recitations of Mahavira's teachings, and an attempt was made in the 5thcentury CE to reconcile the differences. The reconciliation efforts failed, with Svetambara and Digambara Jain traditions holding their own incomplete, somewhat-different versions of Mahavira's teachings. In the early centuries of the common era, Jain texts containing Mahavira's teachings were written in palm-leaf manuscripts. According to the Digambaras,
Āchārya Bhutabali was the last ascetic with partial knowledge of the original canon. Later, some learned
achāryas restored, compiled, and wrote down the teachings of Mahavira which were the subjects of the
Agamas.
Āchārya Dharasena, in the 1stcentury CE, guided the
Āchāryas Pushpadant and Bhutabali as they wrote down the teachings. The two
Āchāryas wrote
Ṣaṭkhaṅḍāgama, among the oldest-known Digambara texts, on palm leaves.
Five Vows
The Jain Agamas enumerate five
(vows) which ascetics and householders must observe. These ethical principles were preached by Mahavira:
-
Ahimsa (Non-violence or non-injury): Mahavira taught that every living being has sanctity and dignity which should be respected as one expects one's own sanctity and dignity to be respected. Ahimsa, Jainism's first and most important vow, applies to actions, speech, and thought.
[ When Mahavira revived the Jain community, ahimsa was already an established, strictly observed rule. The followers of Parshvanatha vowed to observe ahimsa; this obligation was part of their caujjama dhamma (Fourfold Restraint).]
-
Satya (truthfulness): Applies to oneself and others.
[
]
-
Asteya (non-stealing): Not "taking anything that has not been given"
-
Brahmacharya (chastity): Abstinence from sex and sensual pleasures for monks, and faithfulness to one's partner for householders
-
Aparigraha (non-attachment): For lay people, an attitude of non-attachment to property or worldly possessions; for mendicants, not owning anything
The goal of these principles is to achieve spiritual peace, a better rebirth, or (ultimately) liberation. According to Chakravarthi, these teachings help improve a person's quality of life. However, Paul Dundas writes that Mahavira's emphasis on non-violence and restraint has been interpreted by some Jain scholars to "not be driven by merit from giving or compassion to other creatures, nor a duty to rescue all creatures" but by "continual self discipline": a cleansing of the soul which leads to spiritual development and release.
Mahavira is best remembered in the Indian traditions for his teaching that ahimsa is the supreme moral virtue. He taught that ahimsa covers all living beings, and injuring any being in any form creates bad karma (which affects one's rebirth, future well-being, and suffering). According to Mahatma Gandhi, Mahavira was the greatest authority on ahimsa.
Soul
Mahavira taught that the soul exists. There is no soul (or self) in Buddhism, and its teachings are based on the concept of
anatta (non-self).
Mahavira taught that the soul is
dravya (substantial), eternal, and yet temporary.
To Mahavira, the metaphysical nature of the universe consists of dravya, jiva, and ajiva (inanimate objects). The jiva is bound to saṃsāra (transmigration) because of karma (the effects of one's actions). Karma, in Jainism, includes actions and intent; it colors the soul ( lesya), affecting how, where, and as what a soul is reborn after death.
According to Mahavira, there is no creator deity and existence has neither beginning nor end. Deities and demons however exist in Jainism, whose jivas are a part of the same cycle of birth and death. The goal of spiritual practice is to liberate the jiva from its karmic accumulation and enter the realm of the , souls who are liberated from rebirth. Enlightenment, to Mahavira, is the consequence of self awareness, self-cultivation and restraint from materialism.
Anekantavada
Mahavira taught the doctrine of
anekantavada (many-sided reality). Although the word does not appear in the earliest Jain literature or the Agamas, the doctrine is illustrated in Mahavira's answers to questions posed by his followers. Truth and reality are complex, and have a number of aspects. Reality can be experienced, but it is impossible to express it fully with language alone; human attempts to communicate are
nayas ("partial expressions of the truth"). Language itself is not truth, but a means of expressing it. From truth, according to Mahavira, language returns—not the other way around.
One can experience the "truth" of a taste, but cannot fully express that taste through language. Any attempt to express the experience is
syāt: valid "in some respect", but still a "perhaps, just one perspective, incomplete".
Spiritual truths are also complex, with multiple aspects, and language cannot express their plurality; however, they can be experienced through effort and appropriate karma.
The Jain Agamas suggest that Mahavira's approach to answering Metaphysics, philosophical questions was a "qualified yes" ( syāt). A version of this doctrine is also found in the Ajivika school of ancient Indian philosophy.
According to Dundas, the anekantavada doctrine has been interpreted by many Jains as "promoting a universal religious tolerance ... plurality ... and ... benign attitude to other ethical, positions"; however, this misreads Jain historical texts and Mahavira's teachings. Mahavira's "many pointedness, multiple perspective" teachings are a doctrine about the nature of reality and human existence, not about tolerating religious positions such as sacrificing animals (or killing them for food) or violence against nonbelievers (or any other living being) as "perhaps right". The five vows for Jain monks and nuns are strict requirements, with no "perhaps". Mahavira's Jainism co-existed with Buddhism and Hinduism beyond the renunciant Jain communities, but each religion was "highly critical of the knowledge systems and ideologies of their rivals".
Gender
A historically contentious view in Jainism is partially attributed to Mahavira and his ascetic life; he did not wear clothing, as a sign of renunciation (the fifth vow,
aparigraha). It was disputed whether a female mendicant (
sadhvi) could achieve the spiritual liberation like a male mendicant (
sadhu) through asceticism.
The digambar sect (the sky-clad, naked mendicant order) believed that a woman is unable to fully practice asceticism and cannot achieve spiritual liberation because of her gender; she can, at best, live an ethical life so she is reborn as a man.
Mahavira had preached about men and women equality. The Svetambaras have interpreted Mahavira's teaching as encouraging both sexes to pursue a mendicant, ascetic life with the possibility of moksha ( kaivalya, spiritual liberation).
Rebirth and realms of existence
Rebirth and realms of existence are fundamental teachings of Mahavira. According to the
Acaranga Sutra, Mahavira believed that life existed in myriad forms which included animals, plants, insects, bodies of water, fire, and wind. He taught that a monk should avoid touching or disturbing any of them (including plants) and never swim, light (or extinguish) a fire, or wave their arms in the air; such actions might injure other beings living in those states of matter.
Mahavira preached that the nature of existence is cyclic, and the soul is reborn after death in one of the trilokthe heavenly, hellish, or earthly realms of existence and suffering. Humans are reborn, depending on one's karma (actions) as a human, animal, element, microbe, or other form, on earth or in a heavenly (or hellish) realm. Nothing is permanent; everyone (including gods, demons and earthly beings) dies and is reborn, based on their actions in their previous life. Jinas who have reached Kevala Jnana (omniscience) are not reborn; they enter the siddhaloka, the "realm of the perfected ones".
Iconography and presentations
Names and epithets
Surviving early Jain and Buddhist literature uses several names (or
) for Mahavira, including
Nayaputta,
Muni,
Samana,
Nigantha,
Bamaṇa, and
Bhagavan. In early Buddhist
Sutra, he is referred to as
Araha ("worthy") and
Veyavi (derived from "Vedas", but meaning "wise"). He is known as
Sramana in the
Kalpa Sūtra, "devoid of love and hate".
According to later Jain texts, Mahavira's childhood name was Vardhamāna ("the one who grows") because of the kingdom's prosperity at the time of his birth. According to the Kalpa Sūtra, he was called Mahavira ("the great hero") by the gods in the Kalpa Sūtra because he remained steadfast in the midst of dangers, fears, hardships and calamities. He is also known as a tirthankara.
Iconography
Mahavira is usually depicted in a sitting (or standing) meditative pose, with a lion symbol beneath him; each
tīrthankara has a distinct emblem, which allows worshippers to distinguish similar idols. Mahavira's lion emblem is usually carved below his legs. Like all
tirthankaras, he is depicted with a
Shrivatsa. The yoga pose is very common in Buddhism, Hinduism, and Jainism. Each tradition has had a distinctive auspicious chest mark that allows devotees to identify a meditating statue to symbolic icon for their theology. There are several
srivasta found in ancient and medieval Jain art works, and these are not found on Buddhist or Hindu art works.
and downcast eyes in digamber tradition while in Shetamber tradition it is wide open.
Mahavira's earliest iconography is from archaeological sites in the city of Mathura, dated from the 1stcentury BCE to the 2ndcentury CE. The srivatsa mark on his chest and his dhyana-mudra posture appears in Kushana Empire-era artwork. Differences in Mahavira's depiction between the Digambara and Svetambara traditions appear in the late 5thcentury CE. According to John Cort, the earliest archaeological evidence of Jina iconography with inscriptions precedes its datable texts by over 250 years.
Many images of Mahavira have been dated to the 12th century and earlier; an ancient sculpture was found in a cave in Sundarajapuram, Theni district, Tamil Nadu. K. Ajithadoss, a Jain scholar in Chennai, dated it to the 9th century.
Jivantasvami represents Mahavira as a princely state. The Jina is represented as standing in the kayotsarga pose wearing crown and ornaments.
File:Osian_17-67.jpg|Jivantasvami image of a Tirthankara carved on Torana in Mahavira Jain temple, Osian
File:Vardhaman Keezhakuyilkudi.jpg|alt=See caption|Rock-cut sculpture of Mahavira in Samanar Hills, Madurai, Tamil Nadu
File:Solitary Jina Kalugumalai.jpg|Rock-cut sculpture of Mahavira in Kalugumalai Jain Beds, 8th century
File:Mahavira Pratimaji.jpg|alt=See caption|Tallest known image of the seated Mahavira, Patnaganj
File:Mahaveer.jpg|alt=See caption|Four-sided sculpture of Mahavira in Kankali Tila, Mathura
File:Tirthankaras.jpg|alt=Two nude statues| Tirthankaras Rishabhanatha (left) and Mahavira, 11th century (British Museum)
File:Mahavira Seattle 01.JPG|alt=Mahavira, seated|Temple relief of Mahavira, 14th century (Seattle Asian Art Museum)
File:Thirakoil-mahaaveerar.JPG|alt=See caption|Relief of Mahavira in Thirakoil, Tamil Nadu
File:Ahinsa_Sthal.jpg|16-foot, 2-inch stone statue of Mahavira in Ahinsa Sthal, Mehrauli, New Delhi|alt=Large outdoor statue of Mahavira, with a seated worshipper for scale
File:Ellora Cave 32 si0339.jpg|alt=See caption|Mahavira statue in Cave 32 of the Ellora Caves
Temples
Along with
Rishabhanath,
Parshvanath,
Neminath, and
Shantinath;
Mahavira is one of the five
tirthankaras that attract the most devotional worship among the Jains. Various Jain temple complexes across India feature him, and these are important pilgrimage sites in Jainism.
Pawapuri, for example, is a hilly part of southern Bihar, which is believed to have been a place where 23 out of 24
tirthankaras preached, along with Rishabha. According to John Cort, the Mahavira temple in Osian, Jodhpur, Rajasthan is the oldest surviving Jain temple in western India; it was built in the late 8thcentury. Important Mahavira temple complexes include
Jal Mandir in Pawapuri, Trilokyanatha Temple, Meguti Jain Temple, Kumbharia Mahavira Temple,
Sankighatta, Muchhal Mahavir Temple, Bhandavapur Jain Tirth, Dimapur Jain Temple, and Jain temple, Kundalpur
Worship
Samantabhadra's
Svayambhustotra praises the twenty-four
tirthankaras, and its eight
(songs) adore Mahavira. One such
shloka reads: Samantabhadra's
Yuktyanusasana is a 64-verse poem which also praises Mahavira.
Festivals
Two major annual Jain festivals associated with Mahavira are Mahavir Janma Kalyanak and Diwali. During Mahavir Janma Kalyanak, Jains celebrate Mahavira's birth as the 24th and last
tirthankara of
avasarpiṇī (the current time cycle). During Mahavir Janma Kalyanak, the five auspicious events of Mahavira's life are re-enacted. Diwali commemorates the anniversary of Mahavira's
nirvana, and is celebrated at the same time as the
Diwali. Diwali marks the New Year for Jains. Jains celebrate
Mahavir Janma Kalyanak every year on the 13th day of the Indian Calendar month of
Chaitra.
Influence
Michael H. Hart ranked him 100th in his 1978 book, “”, below the
The Buddha (ranked 4th) and
Ashoka (ranked 53rd).
According to Pantheon's 2024 Historical Popularity Index (HPI), Mahavira is ranked 19th among the most famous Indian people of all time.
Mahavira's teachings were influential. According to Rabindranath Tagore,
An event associated with the 2,500th anniversary of Mahavira's nirvana was held in 1974:
See also
Notes
Sources
External links