Chapter XII
Bhattarak
Sampradaya
Bhattarakas in the Digambara
community are the counterparts of the Svetambara Chaityavasins whom we have
already met in the first section of this article as those monks who, fallen from
the ideals of the great vanavasis (forset dwellers), had flocked to
towns, residing in temples or chaityas or monasteries leading the life of
a householder, yet calling themselves ascetics. As a matter of fact, the word
'Bhattarak' connotes the distinction of a Maharaja, literator, Muni, pujya or
deva or acharya. 'Bhattarak' has been defined as one who is "well up in all
shastras and kalas, organizer of gachchhas, large-hearted, influential and
revealing."
Notwithstanding the emergency
permission awarded to Svetambara sadhus for being clothed, nevertheless
they have been ordained to live outside populated places, eat food unsolicited
and keep themselves away from possessions (parigraha) of all kinds. Yet
the influence of these mathavasi sadhus was on the increase to such an
extent since the 8th century A.D. of the Christian era, that a shastrartha
had to be convened in Patan (Gujarat) to obtain removal of ban against the
entry of basatikavasis in this capital city in the eleventh century. The
Vidhichaitya movement against the Chaityavasis started in the eleventh century
took half millennium to bear fruit as late as the end of fifteenth century in
Gujarat and Rajasthan i.e. in the post-Lonka period.
No such movement, parallel to the
Svetambara Vidhimarga, is discernible in the history of Digambara Church.
Nevertheless characteristic instances of sluggishness had begun to be
pin-pointed in Digambara literature simultaneously with that of Svetambaras
during the centuries of the Early Medieval Period for example "People,
Sadhu-charactered, are scanty like enanent munis; alas! ascetic munis
too, approach the villages for night-rest just like deer." (Atmanushasan :
V. 9th century) : "Wonder it is that naked people are still available in the
Kali Age." (Upasakadhyayana : V. 10th century). "Present-day Munis, may
also the adored (Sashastil : V. 1016).
Certain evidence, available in the
thirteenth century, indicates that mathvasi tradition may have
crystallised in the eleventh and twelfth centuries among Digambaras for example
Pandit Ashadhar in his Angara Dharmamrita (V. 1300 = 1243) has it that "in this
Dark Age, god sermonizing Munis are seen here and there twinkling like glow-worm
(jugnju) - Alas !" The process adopted by these Munis may be like this -
they were wont to approach the towns for food; where they had now started
tarrying, ending with residence in populated places resulting the establishment
of dharma pattas of the bhattaraks of which the first patta is supposed to have
come into existence in Delhi, the capital of the alien Turks for whose sake the
Munis, applying the Apavad not only draped their nudity and obliged the harem
ladies by their entry into inner apartment.1 These examples led them as a class
to take drapery for granted. As history repeat itself, the first Svetambara
schism of V. 271 = 214 A.D., based on drapery, was now on the way to acceptance
after a millennium !
Ashadhar, the representative Acharya
par excellence of the 13th century Digambarism the personal observer of the
Bhattarak aberrations in his samaj, has expressed his sentiments the tika of the
shlokas in 'pathetic' words saying that "Corrupt Pundits and wicked
(watha Munis have defiled the pure teachings of the Jina". Svetambara Mahendra
Suri has a chapter 'Digambara-mat-Vichara' in his Shatpadi - (V. 1263 = 1206
A.D.)2 where he has furnished detailed
picture of the life of contemporary Digambara Sadhs which is instructive at
alarming ! :- "Digambara Sadhus were living in mathas and temples along with
nuns (aryika by whom they got their food prepared on occasions, besides
getting their feet massaged) women; getting their feet worshipped with flowers,
leaves, ghee, milk, water saffron or sandal (paste) or gold or silver or washed
or anointed with oil. They always stayed at one place; sleeping in temples;
obtained support from fireplace
during winter; slept on the cushion
of payal (straw) and kept a variety of medicines like khadirbati,
conconut etc. for physicking;
employed jyotish (astrology) prognosting omens; using mantra, (charm-spell) and
minerals; rode on palanquins and shod themselves with cloth-shoes : kept
Kamandals (water-pots) of copper. brass etc. and peacock feather brush
(mor-pichchhis); matting and clothing (coloured upper cloth) for warding off
basfulness e.g. dhoti or
dupatta which was some times put on and which was caused to be washed by
dhobi (washerman). Miscellaneous other things were also kept or possessed
by these Digambara sadhus of the 12th-13th century such as pustak-pustika,
kaparika, sthapanika, pustakpatta, yoga patta, asana-patta, trnapati,
straw-langoti, finger ring etc. They also sermonized and taught
disciples."
This means that in the time of
Bhattarak Basantkirti of Mandal-Chittor (C.1264 = 1207 A.D.), the Apwad Vesh
applied to the drapery of Munis for emergency's sake, was the result of the
twelfth century 'mathawas' (residence in matha) which, in the words of
Ashadhar had crystallised into 'matha-patitva' (Headship of matha) in the 13th
Century. Thus Mahendrasuri (Shatpadi 1206/1237) and Ashadhar (Angaradharmamrta
1243) both contemporaries of the Svetambara and Digambara creeds respectively
are unanimous on the acts of omission and commission perpetrated by sadhus
of the Digambara brand.
Coming to the fourteenth century,
the reign of Firoz Shah Tughluq is regarded as the period when the Apwad
practice was repeated in the harem of the Sultan when the Bhattarak pratha is
believed to be 'formally' instituted in the Digambara Church. After the
ceremonial installation of the sadhu incumbents, they acquired freedom to
address the householders duly draped and came to be called Bhattaraks. Following
the Delhi patta recognized by Firoz Shah, dozens of pattas came into existence
in due course throughout northern and western India including the Deccan of
which the Gwalior and Chanderi patta are the most important and relevant to us
with Chanderi treated next to that of Gwalior. The phenomenon of multi-patta
Digambarism may be said to be the concomitance of the disintegration of the
Tughluq Empire after Firoz Shah into provincial kingdoms giving place to an All
India Central Government.3
We must concede at once that
Bhattarakism was the product of necessity thanks to the absence of any reformist
movement in the Digambara Samaj like Vidhichaitya movement among the Svetambara
which was active till the end of the fifteenth century. As suggested by a modern
Jaina scholar, the schism of V. 271 = 214 A.D. based on nudism or otherwise of
the monks, raised its head again to split the Digambara Church further, after
the lapse of the whole millennium thanks to the human weakness of the Munis who
gained a preference and an advantage over the strict followers of Mhavira's
precept and practice under the auspices of the last Sultan of Delhi (Firoz
Tughluq) who could be reckoned as a sympathiser of Jainism (Digambara), after
the promoting and patronising attitude towards Svetambarism of his predecessor
(Muhammad bin Tughluq). In fact Digambarism had to wait for another two hundred
and fifty years before, what is called, the 'Vanarasiya Mat' of Pandit
Banarsidas was founded as an antidotal counter-action against Bhattarakism in
the seventeenth century.
It may not be supposed, however,
that we are taking the liberty of condemning the Bhattarak Movement altogether.
On the contrary we agree with modern scholars who have declared the Bhattaraks,
the righteous among them, is the benefactors of Jainism being the inspirers,
promoters and patronisers of the orthodox image-worshippers, the builders of
temples and consecrators of idols, transcribers of old and new manuscripts,
patrons of authorship and establishers of libraries (bhandars) most of
which have survived to this day as the repositories of palm-leaf and paper books
and documents of great historical and literary value. Sakalakirti Shubhachandra,
Prabhachandra and Gyanabhushana have been named by scholars as Bhattaraks, who
were scholars, authors and high-charactered in spite of their aberration from
the right path early Bhattaraks who have not only served the cause of Jaina
dharma immensely but they have saved dharma from sinking down during the
pre-patta period of Digambarism i.e. roughly during the two centuries before the
Turkish conquest of Northern India.4
Mula Sangha - As regards the sanghas, such of
them with whom we are concerned in the fifteenth century for example Yapaniya,
Kashtha Sangha, Mathur Sangha, more specially Dravida Sangha had been declared
fallacious and deceptive (Jainabhas) as early as the tenth century in standard
works like Darshana Sara. Only Mula Sangha was an exception in the early
centuries as its name 'Mula' (root or base) would have us believe but with the
advance of time Mula Sangha originally intact in the early centuries, succumbed
to the aberrant beliefs and practices of the other
sanghas.
For the history of fifteenth century
Digambara Bhattaraks, we are mainly concerned with Mula Sangha and Kashtha
Sangha whose contribution to literature and to organisational affairs from Delhi
to Gwalior and Chanderi (Western Bundelkhand) will be taken up presently.
Historical sources, Svetambaras begin to be available from the 13 the century.
Digambara pattavails are unfortunately a desideratum, except those few preserved
in the latter day Bhattarak Bhandars specially in the Amer Bhattarak Bhandar of
which the available Guru Namavali of the Nandi Shakha Balatkara Gana of the Mula
Sangha has been referred to by two senior scholars - Pandit Parmanand Jain
Shastri and Agarchand Nahta.5 But it was given to Dr. Jyoti
Prasad Jain to unravel the entanglement caused by the only available pattavalis
and guruvavalis which belong to the period from the sixteenth to the nineteenth
century when the original Delhi patta had disintegrated into sub-pattas whose
statistics and time schedule for the early period are doubtful and unreliable
with affect from the thirteenth century onwards with which we are directly
concerned.
Two earliest names which seem to be
free from the mist of inauthenticity are those of Basantakirti and
Dharmachandra. Which the date for Basantkirti of Mandal (not Mando) regarded as
'parampara-Guru6 has been mentioned as 1264=1207
A.D. who is supposed to have visited the then Sultan's harem to satisfy the
curiosity of the royal ladies, was really the founder of the Ajmer patta.
Dharmachandra has been reported as a Bhattarak honoured by "Hammira Bhupal" who
according to the identification of Dashratha Sharma was no other than Sultan
Nasiruddin Mahmud son of S.Iltutmish.7 Ratnakriti, his successor on the
Ajmer patta, lived and died there.
The next Bhattarak after Ratnakirti,
the great Prbhachandra with whom we are on surer grounds as to his course of the
thanks to his Shravaka disciple Kavi Dhanapala's references about his
guru in his Apabhransha Bahubali Charit written in 1454 (1397). His first known
authentic date is V. 1408 = 1351 A.D. : he is the founder of the Delhi patta and its first pattadhish about
whom Dhanapala has reported that he himself had studied under him in Palanpur
(Gujarat) and accompanied him on his travels to Pattan, Khambhat, Dhara, Deogiri
etc. and finally to Yoginipur (Delhi) where a large gathering assembled to
celebrate his accession to the patta of Ratnakirit. Bhattark Prabhachandra, now
Pattadhish of Delhi, had regaled the Sultan 'Mahmud Sahi' (i.e. Muhmmad Tughluq
1325-51) and had discomfited the disputants by his
learning.
During the regime of Prabhachandra
as the first founder-pattadhara of Delhi, there was only one undivided (akhanda)
patta in the Metropolis, of the Mulasangha. Also when earlier branch pattas were
established during his own and that of his successor. Padmanandi's time (C.
1368-C. 1418), these new pattas were all governed by the Delhi patta e.g. those
of Ajmer, Gwalior etc. Disintegration of the Delhi patta started after
Padmanandi with the establishment of several pattas like those of Sagawada.
Surat, Idar, Malwa etc. more or less independent of the Delhi patta of the
Centre until the bifurcation of the Delhi patta itself during the regime of
Padmanandi's grand disciple. Jinachandra (C.1450-C. 1514 A.D.) into Chittor and
Nagaur pattas, with the winding up of the Centre. No wonder, therefore, that the
pattavalis and guruvavalis of the Mulasangha available, acquire authenticity
about patta-succession, guru-names and dates (as and when mentioned) with effect
from the sixteenth century, not earlier.
Coming back to Padmanandi (C.
1368-C. 1418) the pattavalis, prepared during his time or immediately after him,
all take their start with Bh. Padmanandi himself the most complete pattavali
from the earliest times to the first half of the twentieth century Vikrami being
that of the Chittor-Amer patta. Padmanandi himself has a very distinguished
place in the heirarchy of the Mulasanghi Bhattaraks. His disciples and grand
disciples have glorified him in their records and prashastis. He has left a
number of works while his disciples were numerous in diverse places in Gujarat
and Gwalior.
Padmanandi successor was Shubha
Chandra (C. 1414-C.137 A.D.) whose devotee, some "Rajadhiraja" has been suggested to
be Sayyid Mubarak Shah, the Delhi Sultan. Shubhachandra in V. 1481 = 1424 A.D.
is known to have consecrated three images in Deogarh (Lalitpur District of Uttar
Pradesh) Namely those of Vardhaman Mahavira. Padmanandi (his own guru) and
Basantkirit the parampara-guru, during the reign of 'Shah Alam' (i.e. Hoshang
Shah Ghori) while two years earlier in 1479 = 1422, the Apabhransh work
'Parashwanath Charit' was produced in Karhal (Itawa District) of the
Chauhan Chief Bhojaraja by the son of his minister Amar
Sinha.
The successor of Bh. Shubhachandra
on the gaddi namely Jinachandra (C. 1450-C. 1514) "is perhaps the greatest
consecrator of Jaina images not only of his time but of the entire historic
period" (of Jainism). His mention in the pattavali has been made with all
distinctions as a learned man of high character. Images, consecrated by him are
found all over Northern India in almost all Jain temples today mostly dated 1547
(1490), 1548 (1491) or 1549 (1492). In the year 1510 (1453) Jinachandra
consecrated several Jaina images in the town of Tonk in the dominions of the
Tomara monarch of Gwalior State. In the numerous stone images of his time
consecrated by many of his disciple and grand disciple Munis, his name is
invariable mentioned in the murtilekhs while after his death, specially
after 1575 (1518) his mention has come down as an ancestor (purva purush), his
period as pattadhish extending to 64 years (C. 1450- C. 1514), Many a Muni,
brahmachari and grhastya scholar was his
disciple.
Chanderi Patta � Dhilli patta alone will not present
the account of Mulasangha for our purpose without a reference to the Chanderi
Patta which covered Malwa and Bundelkhand in the fifteenth century. Pattadhar of
Dhilli Patta, named Padmanandi (C. 1368-C.1418 A.D.) had a disciple, other than
Shubhachandra, in Devendrakirti who enjoyed a position in the Nandi Amnaya of
the Mulasangh no less important than that of Padmanandi. Devendra Kirti who
passed the major portion of his Bhattarak career in Bundelkhand and its
neighbourhood, as compared to Gujarat, has the credit of founding the Chanderi
Patta. We know that with the abolition of the gaddi of Gandhar, Devendra Kiriti
revived it is Rander in V. 1461 = 1404 A.D. from where it was transferred
by Bh. Vidyananandi in V. 1581 = 1461 A.D. to Surat but it is not clear whether
Devendra Kiriti had attained to the status of Bhattarak in 1461 or earlier. In
the prashasti of the Punyasrava (Sanskrit), he has been called a 'Muni'
and a disciple of Bh. Padmanandi in V. 1473 = 1416 A.D. An image inscription of
Deogarh (Lalitpur) would have us believe that in V. 1493 = 1436 A.D.
Devendra Kirti has been called 'Bhattarak'. Chanderi Patta should have been
established before this date in as much as his Chief Disciple Vidyanandi Parwar
has been called the disciple of Devendra Kirti Dikshitacharya, acharya or guru
with effect from the year V. 1499 = 1442 A.D. in various inscriptions while an
image inscription of V. 1511 = 1454 expressly calls him a
Bhattarak
The region of Chanderi and
neighbourhood was called in those days 'Chanderi Mandal' and Devendra Kirit has
been recognized in V. 1532 = 1475 A.D. as 'Chanderi Mandalacharya' in an
image inscription of the Bada Mandir of Bhelsa (Vidisha) in which Bhattarak
genealogy of Dhilli-Patta from Prabhachandra to Jinachandra (and Sinhakirti)
precedes Devendra Kirti and his successor Tribhuvana Kirti. Similar inscriptions
about Devendra Kirti have been found in Karanja, Ganj Basoda and Guna (dated V.
1531 - 1474), besides two others dated V. 1542 = 1485.
In an image inscription of Bada
Mandir, Lalitpur, Tribhuvankirti (successor of Devendra Kirti) has been called
Mandalacharya which may mean that Tribhuvanakirti had occupied the Chanderi
Patta sometime before V, 1525 = 1468 when the amnaya of Bh. Jinachandra
and Bh. Sinha Kirti (both of Dhilli Patta) too was flourishing. Besides this,
Tribhuvanakirti figures in V. 1522 = 1465 A.D. as the consecrator of a Chaubisi
(24 Tirthankaras) patta in Bada Mandir, Chanderi which means that he was
occupying the patta from before 1465 A.D.
In a manuscript of Shantinath Purana
in the Shastra Bhandara of Bhanpura Bada Mandir, the prashasti calls the
Bhattarak tradition of Devendrkirit etc. as 'Malwadhish' or
'Malwadeshadhisha' (V. 1663- 1606 A.D.) and, 'Malwadesh' again in
Sironj Nagara 'Chaityalaya' (called Golarad, besides the title of
'Mandaleshwara' and 'Mandalacharya' given to Bh. Lalit Kirti in two image
inscriptions.10
In V. 1746 = 1689 A.D. the
Chanderi-Sironj-Vidisha Patta has been called Parwar Patta for the obvious
reason that both pattas of Chanderi and Sironj were established by Parwar Samaj
and a Bhattarak from the Parwar Samaj presided over each patta with the
qualification that Bhelsa had no independent gaddi although the Bhattaraks
stayed there for months together treating it is the chief centre of the Parwar
Samaj ever since. As for the Sironj patta, that it continued up to the
nineteenth century is proved by a yantra-lekha found in the Digambara Jaina
Mandir of Guna dated V. 1871 = 1814 A.D.11 when Sironj was the headquarters of
a pargana in the Nawabi State called Tonk prior to the Anglo-Nawab Treaty of
1818.
As to why the name of Chanderi patta
was changed to Malwa patta, it was presumably due to the newly established
Rajput Bundela State of Chanderi under the Mughul Emperor Jahangir in the
seventeenth century with a view to avoid misunderstanding.
'Jaina Hitaishis' doubt about the
corruption of the Mula Sangha stands confirmed authoritatively by the Ph.D.
thesis on Deogarh12 from which we would like to
supplement an addendum on this subject in as much as the Bhattaraks of the Mula
Sangha had dominated from beginning to end the religious activities of this
great Jaina centre in the fifteenth century for good or ill. The learned writer
of this Hindi monograph, after tracing the development of Bhattarakism with
special reference to the Mula Sangha deplores the materialism of the Bhattaraks
who attributed themselves to Mula Samgha in spite of their clothing which had
reduced them to the status of "corrupt Munis."
Details about the Bhattaraks of the
Mula Sangha lead as to two parallel traditions :- namely those of the 'Senagana'
and the 'Balatkaragana'. Bhattaraks of the Senagana attribute themselves to
Pushkara gachchha and, assuming the epithet of 'Vrshabhasenanvaya', trace their origin to Vrshabhasena (the
ganadhara or head attendant of Rishabhadeva). Bhattaraks like Somasena, writer
of Trivarnachar etc. have flourished in this tradition. As to the Bhattaraks of
the Balatkaragana, they attribute themselves to Saraswatigachchha and writing
Kundakundanvaya for themselves, they commence their origin from
Kundakundacharya. Many Bhattaraks have flourished in this tradition whose
disciples and grand disciples were generally scholars. They and their disciples
have been responsible for the production of Jaina literature in great volume,
besides consecration of many a Jaina image.
Balatkaragana has the following
shakhas (branches) : Karanja, Latura, Dhilli-Jaipur, Nagaur, Ater, Idar,
Bhanupura, Surat, Jerhat shakhas etc. Covering these branches, Bhattarak
Padmanandi13 was the Chief Sustainer of Northern
India affairs (V. 1385-1450 = 1328-93 A.D.). He had three Chief Disciples namely
Shubhachandra, Sakalakirit and Devendrakirit who initiated the branches of
Delhi-Jaipur, Idar and Surat respectively. Their disciples and grand disciples
were responsible for the other branches. Such literati as Sakalakirti,
Shubhachandra, Shrutasagara and Brahmanemidatta etc. belong to this
Balatkaragana.
Bhattaraks of the Senagana use the
epithets of Mulasangha, Pushkaragachchha, Vrshabhasenanvaya with their names and
for their identity, at the same time when those of the Balatkaragana use the
surnames of Mulasangha, Saraswatigachchha and Kundakundanvaya-surnames whih they
employed in land-grant documents, consecration records and in grantha prashastis
(book colophons).
Assiduous study of the then state of
affairs, reveals the fact that the sluggish Bhattaraks, whether naked or those
clothed, for that matter, are the ones who have identified themselves with the
above attributes and not those ancient respectable acharyas of the Mulasangha.
Their motive was to keep themselves distinct from the Bhattaraks of such sanghas
as the Kashtha Sangha in as much as they themselves delineate the deportment of
'Munis' in their self-authored books, as depicted by the acharyas of the ancient
Mulasangha with the qualification that several Bhattaraks like Srutasagara etc.
have now and then extended their justification to shithilachar (slackness)
too.
Although these Bhattaraks felt that
they were incapable of following the spiritual Muni behaviour, nevertheless they
have presented their own selves as Muni, Yati, Gani, Suri etc. for the simple
reason that according to the Jaina heirarchy, there is provision in society of
only two divisions of 'Muni' and 'Shrawak'. In case they allowed themselves to
be counted among the shravakas, how could their title and position be highly
regarded from the points of view of dharma and samaj to entitle
them to palanquin ride with fly-whisk, to the honour of rulers and to the
obedience of shrawaks. With a view to be counted among Munis, they celebrated
their diksha (initiation) by assuming the nagna-linga (nude appearance) as if to
observe the Munivrata of the time honoured tradition. Thereafter they put on
clothing at the so-called instance of the then 'panchas' (assessors).
Their manner of thinking and action deserves to be called a deviation from the
right path and their way of life will be known as "Bhattarak Pantha" because
clothed Bhattaraks can not be recognized as Munis on the lines of clothed Munis
of the Svetambara tradition.
Deogarh not only witnessed the
frequentation of Munis in the medieval period; but provided places of permanent
residence for them. Even now, there exist in Deogarh temples which were not
temples in reality but were lodging houses for sadhus; their construction
was not at all done according to the lines prescribed by shastras for
temples. So much is certain that the sadhus passed the last years of their life
there in as much as we find a number of samadhis (tombs) close to these
so-called temples, besides samadhi-stambhas (pillars) in a sizable
number and charanpadukars (foot- prints) which testify to the fact that
Munis here achieved samadhimaran (death by samadhi) and this was the
place where their funeral rites were performed. The large number of images of
acharyas, upadhyayas and sadhus
found here, lead us to believe that several sanghas of Munis lived here. A
murtilekha (image inscritpion) found here, indicates that some images
were carved for the chaturvidha-sangha (muni, aryika i.e. nun,
shravaka and shravikas) which proves without doubt that in Deogarh various kinds
of facilities were provided for the stay of sadhus.
In short the Sadhus of Deogarh were
a variety of Bhattaraks (with) huge decorated temples, alms houses who caused to
make thousands of images and their consecration."
Name of Jainism in
Deogarh
The images of gods and goddesses
found in Deogarh in hundreds point undisputably to the fact that the Jaina Samaj
of Deogarh was a believer in
ceremonial religion with emphasis on materialism rather than spiritualism in as much as the
Bhattaraks, like the Vajrayanis in Buddhism and the Kapaliks in Brahmanism, had
invented scores of devices for the enjoyment of worldly pleasures and for the
satisfaction of mundane desires in the name of religion. They had bewitched the
samaj with the imaginary kathas (stories) of gods and goddesses, with
mantra-tantra (charms-spells) and miracles. The process, as old as the
post-Gupta period, still lingers among the Kaulas of Kashmir, the Pandas of
Mathura, Varanasi and Prayag and the Bhattarakas of South India. This is
confirmed by a pattavali dated 1805 = 1748 A.D. discovered from the Bhattarak
Shastra Bhandar, Dungarpur (Rajasthan), by Dr. Kasturchandra Kasliwal (Vide Dr.
Kasturchandra Kasliwal : 'Tin Aitihasik Pattawaliyan' : Sammati Sandesh VII, 3,
March 1962, p. 27, as quoted in ibid, p. 132). This feature is also reflected in
the sculptors switching from spiritualism oriented carvings to materialism
oriented carvings (in the fifteenth century).
Kashtha Sangha - Of the twin Sanghas working in
Northern India during our period Kashtha has been traced from the village
Kashtha, near Delhi, on the bank of the Jamuna. The early record of the
activities of the Kashtha Sangha which originated from Mathura as a matter of
fact, is not available in regular sequence except in the existence of metallic images of the
Tomara period in, Gwalior in the eleventh century. Madhava Sena, pattadhara of
Pratap Sena is said to, have achieved victory in debate at the court of Alauddin
Khilji. Earliest date of a Kashtha
Bhattarak, made available, is that of Vimalasena, the consecrator of two images
of the fourteenth century A.D. traced in Jaipur and Delhi dated 1357 and 1371
A.D. respectively. Names of his successors on the patta, yielded by the Kashtha
Sangha Pattavali, are Dharmasena of Hissar.15 Bhavasena and Sahasrakirti until we
come to Gunakirti whose known date is V. 1460 = 1403 A.D. when Pandit
Khemal Khandelwal had presented a copy of the Uttarpurana of Pushpadanta to
Gunakirti.
Gunakirti (1403-24)
: With Gunakirti;
we are on sure grounds about the activities of the Kashtha Sangha in Gwalior for
reasons which apply equally to Bhattaraks of all Sanghas during this period
including the Mula Sangha which also flourished simultaneously in Gwalior with
exemplary fraternity16 during a period when its Kashtha
counterpart of the Mathur gachchha had completely dominated the religious life
of the Jaina Samaj in the fifteenth century rule of the patronizing Tomaras in
the background of the religio-literary achievements of the Poet-Laureate,
Mahakavi Raidhu. With the disintegration of the Delhi Sultanate, the provincial
kingdoms, independent in all respects, proved to be the best patrons of the
Jaina local culture as we have seen in the case of the neighbouring Mandogarh
ruled by the Turkish families of Ghoris and Khilchis. Simultaneously with Malwa,
the Jaina Samaj of Gwalior not only cultivated their time-honoured idolatry on a
grand extensive scale but a prolific devotee of Saraswati in Gwalior like Raidhu
could leave behind single handed the Mandn-Sangram-Punja trinity of Mandogarh in
the realm of idolatrous literary production. The credit for all this distinction
and development in Gwalior goes to the Kashthasanghi Bhataraks in general and to
Gunakirti and his disciple younger brother Yashahkirit in
particular.
Gunakirti was distinguished equally
well in learning, penance and resulting influence that he wielded on the local
Rajput rulers of his times and their senior ministers and treasurers of the
Jaina Agrawal community as per the tributes paid to his qualities of head and
heart by Raidhu and the writer of the Kashtha Pattavali document. Extraordinary
penance, practised by him, had reduced him to an emaciated being. The extensive
carving of images, small and colossal,
accomplished with a vengeance during the reign of Dungar Sinha (1425 = 59
A.D.) was originally inspired by Gunakirti and his
disciples.
Yashahakirti
(1429-53) :
Yashahakirit happens to be a younger brother and disciple of Bhattarak Gunakirti
- a writer of good hand and scholar of Prakrit, Sanskrit and Apabhransh in which
last his four works from his pen are extant. He has been extolled in the
pattavali and by the poet Raidhu who regarded him as his 'mantra guru'. He is
known as the transcriber of the decayed and ragged fragment of the famous
Harivansha Purana of Mahakavi Swayambhudeva which he copied out with the
permission of his guru, sitting in a temple in the vicinity of Gwalior at
Kumaranagar (now Khumharapura) on the bank of the river Murar (1521 = 1464),
completing the missing portion of the manuscript with his own composition. This
autograph transcript of Yashahakirti is preserved in the Bhandarkar Oriental
Research Institute, Poona.17 Himself the author of the four
Apabhransha works extant today, Yashahakirti encouraged Radihu to compose many
Apabhransha Kavya and caused the Jaina Seths of Delhi and Hissar to get
chiselled the colossal images of Gwalior fort by skilled
handicraftsmen.
After Yashahakirti Bh. Malayakirti
(1453-68 A.D.) and Bh. Gunabhadra (1468-83) occupied the Kashtha gaddi of
Gwalior of which the latter is the author of fifteen Apabhransha Kathas,
preserved in the Panchayati Mandir of the Khajur Masjid, Delhi but written in a
Gwalior temple. The pattadhar of Gunabhadra. Bh. Bhanukirti was also the author
of a Katha called Ravivrat Katha.
The pattavali of Gwalior gaddi
referred to by Parmanand Shastri18 seems to be incomplete. After
Bhanukirti the name of Kamalkirti has been introduced followed by names of
Bhattaraks which seem to be those of the Hissar patta of the Kashtha Sangha
including the name of Kamala Kirti who was the 'diksha-guru' of Raidhu
and who established the Sonagiri patta of the Gwalior gaddi on which his
disciple Shubhachandra was seated as its first pattadhara (1449-73). In the
non-availability of further link in the personnel of the Bhattarakas of the
Kashtha Sangha we have to stop here and take up the activity of the Kashtha
Sangha which constitutes virtually the Golden Age of the Jaina Digambara Church
in Gwalior under the Tomara rulers inspired by the Kashtha Bhattarakas and their
Jaina Agrawal disciples who dominated the Court of father and son viz. Dungar
Singh (1425-59) and Kirti Singh (1459-80) with the Poet-Laureate Raidhu as their
mouthpiece and spokesman, a centenarian author of as many as thirty books, big
and small of which two dozen are reported to be extant today. Verify the advent
of the Hisar-Firuza-based Jaina Agrawals who functioned as the ministers and
treasurers of the ruling family had turned the Rajput State of Gwalior into a
Digambara Jaina Centre par excellence representing the culture of the Agrawal
multi-millionner shravakas as sponsored by them. It was a great achievement of the Kashtha
Sanghi Bhattaraks in which they excelled their their Mula Sanghi counterparts of
the Dhilli 'patta, the shravakas
leaving behind their Svetambara rivals of Mandogarh in the literary field thanks
to the single handed efforts of the long lived Mahakavi Raidhu as also in the
realm of image carving in general and the chiselling of the calossal images of
the Gwalior Fort in particular in which the contribution of the two Tomara
rulers between themselves has left a record of constant activities spreading
over a long period of thirty-three years.
Jainism in the
Tomara State of Gwalior (Fifteenth Century)
Tomara Rulers of
Gwalior
The origin of the Tomaras of the
Chambal region has been traced to Aisah, their old capital, to which they had
retired after the occupation of Dhilli by Aibak (1193) following the battle of
Tarain (1192). From Aisah to Dhilli and from Dhilli back to Aisah for a period
of two hundred years before Raja Virasinhadeva (1375-1400) could try his fortune
successfully, first as 'Rai' and later as independent ruler of Gwalior after the
death of Sultan Firuz Shah Tughluq (1388) when Virasinha first combining with
Summer Chauhan of Itawa and the Chiefs of Khora and Bhuingaon (1391-92) declared
himself as independent of Delhi thanks to the civil war that had started among
the weak successors of Firuz but had to submit to the terms of peace and to stay
in Delhi, deprived for a time of his ancestral possession of Aisah. But next
year in 1392-93 he seems to have managed to return to Aisah and start
depredations in Turkish territory when Alauddin Sikander Shah, now the occupant
of the Delhi throne, offered Virasinha the rulership of Gwalior after the death
of Sultan Muhammad Tughluq II in January 1394. But Virasinha could obtain the
possession of the Gwalior Fort from the Qiladar not without the successful
device of stratagem, (1394). This was a great achievement for Varasinha which
proved to be the percussor of great events in the period when the anarchy,
caused by the civil war among the Tughluq
princes, culminated in the thorough sack of the Delhi Metropolis and
general massacre of its population by Amir Taimur (1399) resulting in the
disintegration of the Turkish empires and independent provincial kingdoms
including Gwalior destined to be the representative of Rajput - Jaina culture in
the fifteenth century, the subject of this section. The importance of the Tomara
dynasty of Gwalior does not lie only on their valour in war but also on the
cultural legacy left by them. Virasinha was not only brave in name (vira) and
deed but he equally distinguished himself in own learning and the patronage
of learned men. Himself a scholar
of astronomy, dharma shastra. Vedic learning and Ayurveda, he was the author of
two books 'Durga-bhakti Tarangini" and 'Virasinhavaloka', a
treatise on Indian Medicine (1382). What is more directly relevant to our
subject in hand is the Tomara-Jaina amity, even earlier than the establishment
of Rajput suzerainty over Gwalior. Jayasinha Suri, the founder of Shri Krishna
Gachchha or Shri Krshnarshi Gachchha (1391 = 1334) and the author of
Kumarapalacharitra � Kavya (1422=1365) whose transcript in the same year was
prepared by his grand disciple Nayachandra Muni (later Suri) was known to
Virasinha. On attaining the status of Suri, Nayachandra composed the celebrated
Hammira Maha Kavya at the instance of Viramadeva Tomara (1402-23 A.D.), grandson
of Virasinha and son of Uddharandeva (1400-02). Jayasinha Suri was the
Kavya-guru of Nagachand Suri who had defeated Saranga in disputation according
to the statement of Nayachandra Suri in his Hammira Mahakavya. This Saranga has
been identified as Sharngadhara, the transcriper of Virasinha's Virsinhavaloka,
the grandson of Hammiradeva Chauhan's sabhasada Raghavadeva. Raghuvadeva's two
grandsons, this Sharngadhara and his brother Lakshmi had migrated from
Ranthambhor to the Tomara patronage. Jayasinha Suri himself was the visitor to
Gwalior or Aisaha, as the case may be. So much under Virasinha; more intimate
contact of Nayachandra Suri with Viramadeva in the Gwalior Fort will
follow.
We have seen the contact of
Virasinha with the Suris of Ranthambhor on the eve of the foundation of the
Gwalior kingdom; its culmination will come in the second and third quarter of
the fifteenth century during the reigns of father an son that is Dungar Singh
and Kirti Singh when Jainism developed under the hegemony of the Bhattaraks of
the Kashtha Sangha on one hand and the benefaction of Hisar-Firuza based Agrawal
ministers and treasurers on the other with the Poet-Laureate Mahakavi Raidhu
virtually as the literary father of the 'Jainised' State of the Rajput Tomaras.
In between lies the formative reign of Viramadeva (1402-23), a period of two
decades which furnishes the link between the preparatory stage of Virasinha and
the peak period decades which furnishes the link Dungar-Kirti Age. For example the
celebrated Kayastha scholar wrote the Yashodhara-Charit at the instance of
Minister Ku�haraja who was the builder of a big temple of Chandraprabhu in
Gwalior city celebrating its consecration ceremony with great eclat. The
mausoleum of Shaikh Muhammad Ghaus of the Shatttari Order built by Emperor
Akbar, as Khadagadas would have us believe, is situated on the site of this
temple. Gunakirit of the Kashtha Sangha was the Bhattarak of the Gwalior patta
(1411-29) during the regime of Viramdeva who had inspired Padmanabha Kayastha to
write the Yashodhara Charit. Morre notable than the above, is the composition,
by Nayachandra Suri of Ranthambhor, of the historical Kavya, Hammira Mahakavya
at the instance of Viramadeva, the author
rising above the time-honoured Jaina-Brahmanical communal hostility and
adoring both Brahmanical and Jaina gods in his mangalashlokas while writing on
the matchless and worhshipable
personality of Hammira Chaughan with an altruistic view "to purify the
mind of the community of Rajas." It is a Kavya depicting the character of one
regarded as an ideal Rajput versus a cruel aggressive Turk in the person of Alauddin Khilchi.
That the inspiring source of Nayachandra's Kavya was the Raj-Sabha of Viramadeva
is a tribute to the high political idealism of Viramadeva Tomara of
Gwalior.
Rambhamanjari, a drama, is another
work attributed to Nayachandra Suri, again as a product of Viramadeva's
Rajasthan.
During the weak rule of Firuz Shah
Tughluq (d. 1388), Rajput chiefs of Ganga-Jamuna and Chambal valleys had
combined under the leadership of the ruler of Itawa - Sumer Singh Chauhan as
early as that. Their two risings in succession (1391-92 and 1392-93) during the
regime, of Firuz's successors were followed by Virasinhadeva's capture of
Gwalior fort in the year of grace 1394 when Alauddin Sikandar Shah Humayun Khan
was succeeded by Nasiruddin Muhammad Shah. Ever since this great achievement of
Virasinhadeva, as if both parties had been biding their time during the
following period of uncertainty extending over five years, when great catastrophe, coming from outside,
decided the fate of India for good or ill and ushered in a period for the
country to be divided into a congeries of States independent and warlike without
a Centre with Delhi itself reduced to a position as one among these States.
Gwalior under the Tomaras surrounded by Malwa, Gujarat, Jaunpur and Delhi among
major States, grew, in the course of three decades, into a virile State, free to
evolve a fully developed Jaino-Brahmanical culture during the eventful reigns of Dungar Singh
(1425-59) and Kirti Singh (1459-80) notwithstanding the disturbances caused, off
and on, by the aggressive attitude of the surrounding States. Taken together,
these two regimes, extending over a period of half a century, constitute the
Golden Age of the Gwalior State in general and that of the Jaina culture in
particular.
Dungar Singh
(1425-59) � That
Dungar Singh may not be counted as a promoter of Jaina interests unavoidably, we
may try to present a balanced picture of his personality by indicating the part
played by him as a ruler over the overwhelming Brahmanical majority among his
subjects with a Brahmin Rajakavi as their mouthpiece.
Dungar's is not an ordinary
personality among rulers of the fifteenth century which has been called "the
century of cultural synthesis" par excellence. The great Sultan Zainul Abideen,
founder-father of the Kashmir synthesis who had contacted Rana Kumbha and Dungar
Singh the two Rajput potentiates among others in 1451-52 on the occasion of the
olympian celebrations held in his kingdom, received two manuscripts on Music �
the 'Sangita Chudamani' and the 'Sangita Shiromani' along with a collection of
songs at the hands of Dungar Singh as recorded in the Jaina-Rajatarangini of
Shrivara, the then Rajapundita of Kashmir, Thus "the cultural development,
achieved in the time of (Raja) Man Singh (Tomara) crossing the bounds of
communities and religious beliefs, its luminious beginning had originated with
the friendship between Zainul Abideen and Dungar-Kirti", father and
son.
Dungar Singh had combined in
himself, valour of a hero (sura) with the attributes of a protective
'Kalpa-vraksha' for his Minority dependants at the same time upholding the
banner of traditional Brahmanism as is evident from the Hindi Mahabharat written
in 1435 by his poet-laureate (Raj-kavi) Vishnudas to be rehearsed to this
'Todarmalla' among ashvapatis, gajapatis and narapatis of his times. This Hindi
writer is the first Mahakavi of Hindi adorning the court of Dungar Singh whose
'Svargarohana' was translated into French as early as in 1850, hundred and fifty
years ago. The Mahabharat of Poet Vishnudas was a composition in response to the
royal patron's inquisitiveness as to the essentials of dharma in the
light of the ancient Pandava minority of five (5) destroying the Kaurava
majority of a hundred and one (101).19 Vishnudas has counted all the
aberrations that had crept into the then society especially the scarcity of valour among
Rajas.
In his Hindi Ramayana too, written
of his own accord, the poet has condemned the "seed" of avarice out of which
grows the "tree" of sin which yields the "fruit" of misdeed full of poison.
Avarice, combined with lack of discrimination, are the twin vices which can be
cut down by the axe of 'Rama-nama' i.e. leading to liberation (moksha), the
concomitant requirement for which, as suggested should be 'Ramarajya' and the
presence of a hero (nara) who could protect the
earth.
Verily the poet-laureate of Dungar
Singh, was the begetter of that (Gwalior) Hindi which furnished the foundation
of the vehicle of Tulasidasa and Keshava's verse in the next century,
Vishnudas's Mahabharat and Ramayana, combined with the Chhitaicharita of his
son, Narayanadas, being the pioneers of the Early Mughul Kavyas of
'Hindvi'.
Fifteenth Century the Golden Age of
Gwalior
This brings us to the extra-ordinary
stimulus given to the Jaina community under the twin Tomara patrons, Dungar
Singh and Kirti Singh. We propose to start with the role of the Hisar based
Jaina Agrawal Shreshtins in the court of the Tomara after the sack of the Tughuq
Metropolis and general massacre indiscriminately perpetrated by the Timuride
soldiers when Delhi was reduced to the headquarters of a provincial dynasty like
other similar dynasties of which the Tomaras of Gwalior were perhaps the best
objects of gravitation for the Jaina commercial classes who carried on their
trade on national and international basis of exports and imports. The cultural
history of Gwalior, during this period, is virtually the history of the
civilization and culture of the Agrawala multi-millionaires of the Jaina
community who monopolised the highest keyposts in the administrative set-up of
the Tomara government. Before we do so, we may refer to an image inscription
edited by Prof. Dr. Rajaram Jain in the light of the prashasti of Raidhu's
Sammattaguna-nihan Kavya. The Agrawal Sreshthins had influenced the Tomara
family of rulers with their conduct and behaviour. skilful wisdom, cleverness,
their superior cognition, literary and cultural ambition, their great regard for
the literati and their fondness for art turning Gwalior in the words of Raidhu
into 'great Tirtha.'
Gwalior had been an eminent centre
of the Bhattaraks following the Kashtha Sangha Mathur gachchha, Pushkar gana,
who were the parampara gurus and Samaj-netas (leaders) of all Jaina Agrawals of
this parampara (line). As a great devotee of Adinath, when Dungar Singh, during
his maturity as a poet, invited Raidhu to the Fort as its resident, he could not
but accept the royal invitation. But Raidhu could not feel at his ease without
the darshan of Adinath. So his child-mate and disciple, Kamal Singh
Sanghwi20, Jaina Agrawal of Mudgal gotra, the
trustworthy Nagar Seth of Dungar Singh and his Finance cum Home Minister took
upon himself to construct a fifty foot high colossal image of Adinath which was
consecrated by Raidhu himself. Thanks to the righteous influence wielded by
Raidhu through learning, truthful versification, virtuous behaviour, honest
dealings, other regarding sympathies and servicable disposition without
distinction of rank, the work of chiselling images, high and low alike, was
taken up by the Tomara ruler and his Yuvaraja themselves so much so that Dungar
Singh caused Raidhu by his offer to take up residence in the royal apartments on
the fort where to carry on his activities of authorship.
Not only that. Sometimes Raidhu
himself would approach one of the
opulent Jaina Agrawals to finance the composition of one of his own big works
and his sacrificial nature, piety and literary accomplishment would
automatically derive the desired object as happened in the case of his mature
work in Apabhransh which he himself called 'Kavya Rasayana' namely the Pasnaha
Chariu. The transcript of the manuscript extant in Svetambar Jaina Shastra
Bhandar Delhi in illustrated from was got prepared by one of the sons of Kheu Sahu or Khem Singh who had
accepted the patronage of this most
distinguished work of Raidhu, offered by this patron praiseworthy garments
called from foreign countries after the completion of the
work.
These devotees or admirers of
Raidhu, among the Jaina shresthins, besides the Agrawals hailed from the ranks
of Jaiswals, Khandelvals Padmavatipurwals and Golalars also. On the whole they
were those borught up in a moral environment � energetic, business - minded,
religious, charitable, altruistic, studious, curious, fond of literature, and
respectful to the meritorious, the descriptions of whose qualities has come down to us from the facile pen
wielded by the great Mahakavi. Naturally enough the poet was justified in
highlighting the personalities and the illustrious lineage of these unselfish
and undeceptive patrons in his grantha-prashastis thus furnishing a valuable
sources of Jaina social and cultural history of the period. Before we take up
the narrative of this aspect of Raidhu period of Gwalior with respect to Jainism
and Jaina society in Gwalior of the fifteenth century, we pause to estimate the
role of the chief among the Jaina merchants.
Let us take Kamal Singh first, the
most distinguished in the court of Dungar Singh who took upon himself, along
with the Yuvaraj, Kirti Singh to get prepared the biggest and the highest image
ever erected on the Gwalior fort or else where for the matter of
that.
We have reached a stage when we may
refer to the prashasti of Raidhu's Sa�mattagunanihan Kavva in which the
name of Kamal Singh appears at the seventh or last place among the sources of
the contemporary culture which constituted the Golden Age of the fifteenth
century Gwalior. For example Dungar Singh, Kashtha Sangh Mathuranvaya,
Gunakirtideva, Yashahakirit, Raidhu Amnaya, Kamalasih and Kamala Sinha. This
Kamal Singh, apart from being a friend and devotee of Raidhu was 'Sanghvi' also
i.e. one who had been the leader of a Sangha (pilgrimage party or congregation)
who requested Raidhu to compose a Kavya for him. On his reply in the
affirmative, Kamala Singh communicated the news to the ruler and his
heirapparent who not only supported the proposal but offered to cooperate with
financial help honouring the minister with the offer of betel leaf. This shows the
unanimity created in the religious atmosphere by the practice of mutuality
adopted in the matter concerning Raidhu's literary activities who always chose a
subject for his composition which led to the creation of sober literature. As to
the colossal image of Adinath, which reminds the observers about the
'gommateshwara' of the Decean, the construction of this image started in 1497 = 1440, continued
up to 1530 = 1473 A.D., thirty-three long
years during which period, the preparation of numerous Jaina images
followed in its wake. As and when the image saw its completion, it was caused to
be consecrated by Raidhu himself � an image which has been called 'Rock - Giant'
in a Railway booklet on Gwalior.
The second inciter of Raidhu besides
Kamal Singh, named Kheu Sahu or Khem Singh Sahu, hailed from Delhi which had
been held by Sayyid Mubarak Shah, successor of Khizr Khan to be quite popular as
a philosophical tract. Sahu Kheu, on arrival from Delhi, had become the Nagar
Seth of Gwalior. He was carrying on business transaction with foreign countries
in garments and jewellery and was the construtor of a colossal image in
Gopachal. Raidhu was the consecrator of this image according to its inscription.
Kamal Singh, the son of Khem Singh, who established his business in Gwalior
itself, is the maker of another colossal image of Adinath, eleven hands
high.
Khelha Brahmachari, hailing from
Hisar Firuza was called Brahmachari for having taken the Anuvrat (vow) under
Muni Yasaha Kirit; he was the maker of a colossal image of Chandraprabhu on the
Gopachal, and enjoyed the close friendship of Kamal Singh. He was a Jaina
Agrawal of the Goel Gotra, the eldest son of Tosau Sahu descended from Bilha
Sahu honoured by Sultan Firuz Shah Tughluq. Being studious, he had earned
familiarity with siddhanta and again literature. Khelha Brahmachari's
incitement led to the composition of two Apabhransha works namely Sammai Jina
Chariu and Neni Chariu (a great work) by Raidhu, who in their prashasti, pays
tribute to Khelha's self mortification, penance and fasting, as an inspirer,
lower and appreciator of literature and very clever. The Sammai Jina Chariu was
composed by the poet on the recommendation of Yashahakirti who was the dharma
guru of Khelha and the mantra guru of Raidhu. The book excels in the elegance of
language, depth of ideas, charm of style and weightiness of
subject.
Deprived of any progeny from his
marriage Khelha, entrusting the household responsibility to his adoptive son,
assumed the anuvrata, with Muni Yashahkirti and came to be called
Brahmachari. He caused the
construction of a colossal imge of Chandraprabha on the Gwalior Fort which he
consecrated with the help and cooperation of his friend Kamal Singh and that of
a big shikhar-topped temple. He was a lover of popular mixed language in which
he wanted to study the Puranic works, so Raidhu obliged
him.
For want of space we may now refer
to the estimate of Jaina ladies of Gwalior, presented by Raidhu as endowed with
chastity, devotees of their husbands, religious, skilled as housewives, liberal
minded, compassionate munificient, caretakers of household and energetic."
Raidhu imagines "Jaina lady as a mother � walking like a swan (gai hansa-jiva)
and speaking with a melodious voice (lalit-gira)." Some of these ladies are
credited with the construction of images and temples.
All round the Gopachal hill,
numerous cave temple were excavated
within thirty years so that Gopachal was now a virtual Jaina tritha
to be counted as such.
Mahakavi Raidhu may be regarded as a
poet of synthesis or samanvaya who brought about a new cultural revival
and putting an end to the antique enmity between Lakshmi and Saraswati, so to
say, replaced it by a miraculous synthesis or integrity between the
two.
Conditions in Gwalior during the
Raidhu period were up to the mark from the social, cultural and literary point
of view according to Raidhu thanks to the peaceful and settled political and
economic life. Gwalior was overflowing with wealth and grain, supplied with all
kinds of necessities. Traders earned income with honest dealings. Merchants like
Sahu Khem Singh carried on exports and imports with foreign countries in high
quality clothes and gold, silver, diamond and pearls etc. in sufficient
quantity.
Description of City
: The description
of the city of Gwalior as given by Raidhu, attracts our attention. The grandness
of the Tomar Capital was at its prime; studded with artistic mansions and Jaina
temples; with roads thronged with the multitude; markets with jewellers dealing
with gold and silver, diamonds and pearls, almshouses at every place,
Chatshalas etc. quarters of scholars, poets; consecration (of images) and
temples. When city maidens passed through streets, the city atmosphere was
covered with peaceful silence. Such a city, all rounder in many respects, had
earned the epithet of 'Pandit' from the poet. Gwalior in the eyes of Raidhu was
a "Pandit Shreshth" or "the Guru of shreshtha (pre-eminent) cities" - Gwalior,
"a courtyard of Nature, with rivers and streams, forests and gardens, extensive
reservoirs, verdant fields, swans swimming in tanks, step-wells full of water,
sporting males and females its births are virtually the continuation of Raja
Dungar Sing's progeny."
Only Dungar Singh and Kirti Singh
among kings find mention in Raidhu's writings. Dungar Singh was adorned with
qualities such as subjects-loving, religious, liberal, impartial, progressive,
among diverse others. The entire credit for the development of Jaina literature
and art goes to him, his rule being the Golden Age as per the description of
Raidhu whom he had lodged comfortably in the Fort. Some of his qualities had
been inherited by his son and successor, Kirti Singh.
Jainism under Raja Kirti Singh
(1459-80)
If Maharajadhiraj Dungar was
'Kalikala Chakravarti' to the Jaina Laureate, Shri Kritisinhedeva of Shri
Gopachal Durga has also been called Maharajadhiraja Shri "Hindu Suratran" (Hindu
Sultan) in Vikram Samvat 1525 = 1468 A.D. in an image inscription of Gwalior
Fort (for some achievement unknown). Raidhu too has paid his tribute to the
valour and majesty of Kirti Singh in his Samayakatva Kaumudi with a detailed
inscription mentioning Kirti Singh's Rajkumars. According to Shrivara's
Rajatarangini, Kirti Singh continued to guard the amity towards Sultan Zainul
Abideen like his father. A ruler who did not withdraw his hand of friendship
from a non-Hindu contemporary counterpart of a far-off land, could not be
expected to change his attitude of regard and consideration towards Jainism in
his realm as is proved by the continued prevalence of Apabhransha which held its
monopoly as the medium of Jaina compositions being the national language of the
Jaina community and the treasury of fifty years record of Tomara ruled Gwalior
with special reference to that of Jaina community, commercial and
socio-religious.
During this period Kumaranagari
(Kumharapura) on the bank of the Murar, with its huge Jaina Mandir, was the
headquarters of Bhattaraka patta of Yashaha-Kirti who had established a big
Gyana Bhandar (Jaina library) where manuscripts were transcribed and repaired in
which Yashahakirti distinguished himself as already mentioned, by getting the
oldest extant repairable copy of Swayambhu's Harivansha Purana repaired and
repalcing the missing portion by his own composition (1464 A.D.). Of his own
original compositions written in Apabhransha viz. the Pandava-purana (1440),
Harivansha purna, Jinaratri Katha and Ravi Vrata Katha are extant today. In the
same year (1464 A.D.), in the colophone of the Adipurana of Pushpadant, copied
in Gwalior, it has been recorded that Padma Singh of 'Gobaggiri', with a view to
put his restless Lakshmi to good use, caused twenty four Jaina temples to be
built and one lac manuscripts to be transcribed and donated !22 Yashahakirti, apart from composing
Kavyas in the Jaina language of Apabhransha took pains to encourage Raidhu to
produce Apabhransha Kavyas on one hand and simulatenously to invite Jaina Sahus
of Delhi and Hisar to carve colossal Jaina images on the Gwalior Fort. If
Padmanabha Kayastha had Bhattarak Gunakirti as his inspirer, Raidhu had the
helping hand of the former's borther � disciple Yashahakirti as the pusher of
his literary cause.
Yashahakiriti (1429-53) was
succeeded by Malayakirit (1453-68) to the Bhattarak gaddi and his pattadhar was
Gunabhadra (1468-83) whose fifteen Kathas we have already mentioned under
Bhattarak Sampradaya, written at the instance of Shresthins as
usual.
We want to conclude this section
with a few words on the overwhelming genius of Raidhu who called him self
'Padmavati Puravala' i.e. one of the 84 castes of the Jainas descended from His
Reverence Devanandi and he led his life like a Jaina Brahmana, writing Kathas
for Jaina Sahus and consecrating images to earn his livelihood. Instead of
aspiring to become a 'Lakshmi-sakhah' or a 'dhana Kubera', he lived in deep
devotion of Saraswati. For his earnings he may have visited Delhi, Hisar or
Chandwar, yet he was a patriot of Gwalior par excellence. Whether he was a
diksha-shishya of Kamal Sah or Yashahakirti does not matter but his 'Kavya guru'
was Brahmapala alias Khelha Brahmachari no doubt. "Raidhu is perhaps the last
great poet of Apabhranshar language but his works can not be separated from the
discrimination of the then Jaina capitalists". The tradition of synthesis
started by Nayachandra Suri in the time of Viramadeva and promoted by the
Bhattaraks of Jaina pithas (seats), was followed by Raidhu in his laudation of
Shankara (Shiva) as Rshabhadeva in his Megheshwara Charit.23
Jainism under Raja Kalyanamalla
(1480-88). Apabhransha, the religious medium of
the Jainas so far, now received a set-back in this period giving place to the
rapid development of Hindi literature of which the Chhitai Charit by
Narayanadasa, son of Mahakavi Vishnudasa, his the most distinguished Kavya
written on the lines of Nayanachandra's Hammira Mahakavya and Padmanabha Vyasa's
Kanhadade Prabhanda. In other words the source of the Golden Age of Apabhransha
literature seems to have been on the way to drought under Kalyana with on other spring in
its turn. In fact, for the further development of the Jaina Samaj, instances of
Jaina works are few and far between during this period. As for the 'Gwaliori
Bhasha', there was little difference between the Hindi of Gwalior in the
fifteenth century, and the so-called Juni Gujarati of Gujari, during "a period
when the Yoga - tantra of Gorakhnath was a favourite subject common to Hindu,
Jaina and Musalman Sufis.24 The Gwalior patta of the
Bhattarakas of Kashtha Sangha was intact at least up to the time of Man Singh
Tomara (1486-1516) according to a prashasti in a Ms. of the
'Shatakarmopadesh' copied in V. 1558-1501, when Bhattarak Vijayasen was
occupying the patta as successor of Somakirti. Raja Man Singh gave full regard
to the Jaina community as per the
Nemishwara Gita composed by Chatru son of Shrawak Sirimala of Gwalior in V. 1559
= 1502.25
Of the two Gangolatal Sanskrit
inscriptions of Raja Man Singh dated V. 1551 = 1494 A.D., the first recorded in
April 8, mentions Khem Sah of the Mulwar Caste as the Pradhan of the Raja and
Sajas of the Shrimala caste as the composer of the epigraph. Khem Sah figures
here as desilting the Gangolatal at the instance of the ruler. Another Sanskrit
inscription dated V. 1552 = 1495 is an epigarh yielded by a Jaina image which
pertains to the Mula Sangh, Balatkargana, Saraswati gachchha
Kundakundacharyanava recording the
pattavali as follows :
Padmanandideva, Shubhachandradeva,
Manichandradeva. The name following Manichandradeva, has the prefix Muni (name
not clear) from which it has been guessed that the centre of this branch of Mula
Sangha had been shifted to some other place.26
Cave Temples - Lastly the cave temples of the
Tomara period studded all around the borders of the hill fort of Gwalior furnish
an attractive feature. Not all of them are Jaina temples, while a couple of them
are devoid of images. Some of them, have good-looking halls carved out of rocks
with images. These Jaina cave-temples belonging to the eventful period of V.
1497-1530 (1440-73 A.D.) spreading over thirty-three years are not indebted to
the rulers for their construction to the contemporary Jaina merchants including
their women folk who contributed generously for the sculptural adornment of a
distance of more or less one and a half mile long circumference. The images of
the Gwalior Fort have been divided into five parts on directional basis of which
those situated on the Urwahi gate and the south-eastern group attract the
visitor for their hugeness and their decorative art respectively. The Urwahi
group of cave temples were carved during the reign of Dungar Singh, of which six
of a total of twenty images bear the date V. 1497 = 1440 A.D. including the
Neminath image in sitting posture, thirty feet high.
Of the north-western group of cave
temples, the Adinath image bears the date V : 1527 = 1450 of the reign of Kirti
Singh. The south eastern group, artistically important, bears 18 images, 20 to
30 feet in height and an equal number, eight to fifteen feet
high.
Conclusion
Sixteenth Century A.D.
: Coming to the
sixteenth century of the Christian era, we have already deplored the
non-availabilty of the Bhattarak sources in the form of Pattavalis. There was
scarcity of learned men in the Bhattarak tradition among Shravakas because the
Bhattaraks catered to the need of their own dharma-sadhna (worship)
themselves27 or through their disciples. But
when the Bhattaraks slowly and steadily lost the purity and sublimity of their
conduct, the disgruntled among the Shravaks took to the study of ancient works
and their traslation into the popular language, both in prose and poetry,
themselves composing original works based on original authorities without which
it was not possible or practicable for them to take up the cudgels against the
dominating Bhattarak priests who showed conservative attitude in the matter of
displaying their own (reading) material to others. In the absence of any
reformist movement among the Digambar Samaj, they had to wait for a whole
century for a leader who could pioneer the anti-Bhattarak feelings of the
Digambar Samaj.
As for the Svetambaras we find their
yatis and acharyas as active as before in regaling the rulers of the new set of
the Afghan-Mughul class28
to
whom it was given to preside over the destinies of the Indian masses and
classes. But the movement generated against the unlearned Bhattaraks by the
Dhundhiya - Sthanakvasi reformers, of which the seeds were sown by Lonka Sah,
seems to have received a fillip
from the radical bhaktas, Kabir and Nanak and the like, on a larger scale and
extent, so much so indeed that conditions of the Bhattarak � oriented Jaina
society became intolerable and unbearable to Jaina intellectuals thanks to the
reactionary attitude shown by the Bhattaraka priesthood themselves. Sixteenth
century, therefore, is the period, of the emitting of fire and lava from the
Digambari volcano before its bursting up in explosion in the form of Terapantha
in the next century !
Origin and Development of
Terapanth
The origin of Terapantha has been
traced to the seventeenth century from Varanasi at the hands of a renowned Jaina
Pandit (poet-divine) - Varanasi, the centre of the reformist movement of a
Brahman divine of the 14th - 15th
century from where Kabir Das (half-Muslim, half Jaina-Gorakhnathi) had started
his radical campaign against, caste system, image worship and pilgrimage etc. in
the 15th century which had borne immense fruit and had spread through- out
Northern India in course of time. According to a Shvetambar critic, Acharya Mahamahopadhyaya
Meghavijayagani, in his Prakrit work 'Yuktibodha' published with Sanskrit Tika
from Agra (C. 1700-1643 A.D.), in order to condemn the doctrine of Pandit
Banarsidas which he has repeatedly called 'Varansiya Mat' "which forbade the
shravaks from following the Bhattarakas, ornamenting and anointing the images,
Upadhyaya Meghraja fixes V. 1680-1623 as the date of the origin of the
Varanasiya Mat. In course of time Kunwarpala took up the cause of this doctrine
and was recognized a guru by all and sundry."
Kunwarpala was a friend of
Banarsidas, according to Banarsi Vilasa, a collection of Kunwarpala's many works
who may have risen to be a successor of Banarsidas during the time of the
critic, Megharaja.
After the death of Banarsidas, some
time after V. 1698-1641 A.D., when Pandit Bakhat Ram wrote his 'Buddhi Vilasa',
he has suggested V. 1683-1626 as the date of the foundation of the
'Terahpantha'. The dates 1623 and 1626 make little difference; what is important
is the period at the end of the first quarter when the Varanasiya reformists
declared their separation from the Bhattarakas for good as confirmed by Bakhat
Ram.
The Varabasiya Pantha of Pandit
Banarsi Das soon became popular among the Jainas of the Agra - Jaipur region
from where it spread as an All India Faith and Worship thanks to the writings of
the scholars of these two centres. Apart from this, no work attributed to
Terahpanth, composed prior to V. 1680-1623, has been available so far which is
an additional proof of Banarasidas being its chief founder and that it is the
Varanasiya Mat itself which in due course, has acquired the name of Terahpanth.
The possibility of these views being current prior to his age can not be ruled
out; being a scholar of eminence, Banarsidas's name came to be credited with the
foundation of this Pantha. In short, the name of the old mathavasis now was
Bispantha while their antagonist Vanavasis were the Terahpanthis of today
(Nathuram Premi : Jaina Hitaishi XIV, 4 Jan. 1920, pp.
97-108).
The Bhattaraks of the twentieth
century furnish a good example of a 'Raja' equipped with a palanquin, high
cushion and throne, accompanied during tour by more than one servant as
orderlies, fastened with belt round their waist, cook versed with preparation of
dainty dishes, possession of wealth worth lakhs and crores. Every family pays
them an annual cess collected by a peon or pandit. In case a shravak invites the
'Maharaj' to dinner, he must present an offering (dakshina) which is realised by
force specially in Gujarat. In the Deccan, a Bhattarak, was reported to have
caused the young girl of his
salvery to accompany him when he went out. Whenever there are Bhattaraks of more
than one Sangha in the same city, they are "at cudgles drawn" or sometimes "at
shoes drawn" against one another (e.g. in Nagpur)! No wonder, therefore, that
the reformist intellectuals during the period 1600-1800 A.D. succeeded in
winning over the shrawak samaj to their side to such an extent that more or less
two third population of the Digambara Jainas today follows the Varanasiya Mat,
now called Terahpanth, with the qualification that the educated class among the
Bispanthis too do not follow the Bhattarak Pantha.
As regards the differences between
he Terahpanthis and Bispanthis after the reform carried out by the former, the
following deserve mention :
(1) Sprinkling of the Panchamrit
i.e. the collection of five sweet ingredients used in worshipping deities e.g.
milk, curd, ghee, smell (like sandal paste) and sugar - cane
juice.
(2) Applying saffron to the feet of
the idol.
(3) Offering fruits and flowers to
the deity.
(4) Worship of Kshetrapalas etc.
that is deities protecting fields.
Bispanthis regard these practices as
essential while with Terapanthis, these are prohibited. Nevertheless the main
difference between the Terapantha and the Bispanth is based on the adoration of
the Bhattaraks.
Just as the Bhattarak sampradaya is
supposed to have saved Jainism in the previous centuries (13th, 14th 15th), the
Terapanth are regarded as the
saviours of Jaina dharma in the 17th-18th century from the despotism of the
lordly Bhattaraks, their greatest exertion being applied against their
reactioary conservatism. The Terapanth caused the shravak to believe that if
they could not study Sanskrit, they will be provided facility to acquire
knowledge of Jaina doctrines through Hindi which they did by furnishing
thousands of Jaina standard works in the simple language spoken and understood
in the region of Jaipur - Agra during the last two hundred - three hundred years
so much so indeed that Hindi has developed in this period as the medium of
Digambara Jainism par excellence like Gujarati as that of
Svetambarism.
The question now arises whether the
Bhattaraks are householders
(grhastha) or Muni. They are actually grhasthas no doubt but not like the
ordinary shravaks. As they start their Bhattarak career with 'Keshlonch'
(cutting of the hair), and nudity (also at the time of dinner). Having no
treatise on which to base their practices, they stand on a stage lower than
ordinary shravakas in view of the fact that conditions for Munihood ban
possession (parigraha) even "equal to hair point or shell of a til"; nude
digambarism alone is the road to salvation; food should be eaten as placed on
hand !
Now it remains to consider whether
the existence of Bhattaraks is necessary to conduct religion on the right path
in the Digambara society which suffers from paucity of influential persons like
Munis, sermonisers or Bhattaraks as the case may be. Notwithstanding the
dissatisfaction of the Bispanthis with the character of the Bhattaraks they
recognize them as their dharma - gurus whereas those Bispanthis endowed with
wisdom do not regard them as Munis; they only show hospitable treatment to them.
The Bhattaraks may be given diksha of brahmacharya pratima only (short of hair-lochan and nudity)
with drastic cut in their possessions. This may lead to lessening of antagonism
between Terahpanth and Bispanth (vide Jaina Hitaishi VII,
9).
Appendix
A classical pen-picture of a modern
corrupt Bhattarak of South India as given in Jaina Hitaishi VII, 10-11, is
reproduced here in brief :
The Bhattarakji levies several kinds
of taxes on his followers, the
most profitable being Widow Remarriage Cess introduced by some Bhattarak
more or less three hundred years ago among several castes of Jains, a male
marrying a widow on payment of Rs. 16/- while a female can remarry, after
divorcing her husband, if she pays
Rs. 100/-.
Adoring the Kamandalu (water pot) of
the Maharaj costs
Re. 1/- while the dakshina of a meal is Rs. 3.50/- in the least. On
non-payment of the dakshina or committing some such fault, the shrawak is
outcasted.
The amount of fine is divided into
three parts (i) that of the Bhattarak, (ii) that of the Upadhyaya and (ii) that
of the Patil (malguzar).
On the occasion of the Sanskar
practices of the grhastas, the fee for ear-breathing of children was Rs. 1.25/-.
Permission for holding wakefulness on the occasion of some function with
performance of male - dancers etc. could only be obtained by advance payment of
a 'fine' of Rupee three.
The Maharaj entertained small causes or
suits from plaintiffs on payment of some fee and passed judgement in favour of
one or the other party.
As regards dress on hourse back
putting on jacket and trousers with a gold - embroidered precious sash as
covering for the head and a whip in hand. On religious occasions, he put on
priceless dress of bhagva colour, sometimes embroidered dhoti, exquisite shawl,
a gold bangle and a finger ring; slippers, wooden, silver or golden; kamandalu
made of silver and peacock brush (mayura pichchhi) of gold; eating out of silver
vessels; using perfumery of oil and attar; having a kitchen � maid for cooking �
all this paraphernalia devoid of learning or scholarship to the point of an atom
!
References
1. Instances quoted
by modern scholars are twofold viz. Those of Muhammad Ghori and Firuz bin Rajab
Tughluq.
2. Prakrit text of
Dharmaghoshsuri translated into Sanskrit (V. 1294 =
1237 A.D.).
3. Besides Delhi,
Gwalior and Chanderi, the following pattas have been mentioned; Jaipur, Idar,
Surat, Nagaur, Ajmer, Malkheda (Hyderabad), Kolhapur, Karanja Mudabidai,
Hisar-Firuza, Sonagiri etc.
4. Jaina Hitaishi
VII 7-8, pp. 59-69; 9 pp. 13-20 and XIV, 4 pp. 97-105.
5. Anekant XVII, 1
and Jaina Siddhanta Bhaskar XXII, 1 (51-59) respectively.
6, The year
1207coincides with the second year of Sultan Aibak's regime who had shifted his capital from Ghazni to
Delhi in 1206.
7. His date (C.
1278-1303 A.D.) as calculated by J.P. Jain, does not agree with Nasiruddin
Bhupala.
8. Presumably the
result of the disintegration of the Delhi empire of the Tughluq Sultans when India had become
devided into provincial kingdoms; the earlier example is the disintegration of
the Central Organization of the Chishtiya Silsila of the Sufis in the middle of
the fourteenth century after the demise of Shaikh Naseeruddin Chiragh-i Dilli,
successor of Kh. Nizamuddin Auliya.
9. Dilli patta ke
Mulasanghi Bhattarakon ka Samaya-Krama (time schedule) by J.P. Jain Vide
Anekant, XVII, 2, pp. 54-56, 74; XVII, 4, pp. 159-64.
10. List of
Bhattaraks of Chanderi Patta � Devendrakirti, Tribhuvana Kiriti, Sahasrakriti,
Padmanandi, Yashahakirti, Lalit Kirti, Dharma Kirti, Padma Kirit, Sakala Kirti
and Surendra Kirit.
11. Chanderi-Sironj
(Parwar) Patta by Pandit Phulachandra Shashtri, Varanasi Kshullak Chidananda
Smriti Grantha Dronagiri (Chhatarpur), 1973, pp.
119-22.
12. Deogarg Ki Jain
Kala : Dr. Bhagachandra Jain Bharatiya Gyan Pitha, New Delhi, 1st edn,
1974.
13. There are half a
dozen namesakes of Padmanandi, Our Padmanandi here is the one mentioned in two
inscriptions of Deogarh of which one is preserved in the National Museum of
Delhi while the other is demonstrated in the Jaina Dharmashala
itself.
14. Among such sadhus
(there were) Camanandi, disciple of Lokanandi; Kamaladevacharya and his disciple
Shrideva; Chandrakirti, Yasahakyaticharya and Nagasenacharya, Kanakachandra,
Lakshmichandra, Hemachandra, Dharmachanra Ratnakirti, Prabhachandra, Padmanandi,
Shubhachandra, Devendrakirti etc. worth mentioning.
15. Hissar (Hansi)
was a new Division created by Sultan Firuz Tughluq, a Jaina centre ever since,
extending towards the South up to Narnaul and beyond to Ladnun in the modern
Nagaur district of Rajasthan.
16. As Kashtha Sangha
is devoid of any Achara scripture, we know little about its precepts except the
practice of having 'go-pichhi' (cow tail brush) for the sadhus with the result
that members of one and the same caste or subcaste were the followers of both
the two flourishing sanghas - the Kashtha and the Mula.
17. Gwalior ke Tomar
: Harihar Niwas Dwivedi, pp. 106-8.
18. Anekant, XXII, 2
p. 74.
19. Even as the
Turkish minority had defeated the Rajput majority in Medieval
period.
20. i.e. one who had
been leader of a congregational pilgrimage party.
21. For the account
of Jainism in Gwalior we are indebted to Harihar Niwas Dwivedi (Gwalior ke
Tomara) and Rajaram Jain (Miscellaneous articles).
22. Written in 1440
at the instance of Sahu Hemraj mantri of the (erstwhile) Sultan Mubarak Shah
Sayyid, son and successor of Khizr Khan, Sayyid ruler of Delhi, anachronous
mention of a late ruler, the favourite Sultan of Jaina shreshthis in
general.
23. Gwalior ke
Tomara, pp. 105-12.
24. Ibid, pp.
118-27.
25. Ibid pp.
376-77.
26. Ibid pp. 129,
140.
27. See for example a
clothed Bhattarak, writer of a hotchpotch collection of topics, called
Bhadrabahu Samhita to which attention was, for the first time, drawn by Jugal
Kishore Mukhtar (Jaina Hitaishi, XIII, 2, p. 50) and commented upon in the
editorial (XIII, 8, p. 367) to the effect that the hot displeasure (Kopa) shown
against the admirers of Digambara Munis or the Yati himself in this Age by the
prejudiced author led him to call them 'moodh' (blockhead) and 'unadorable'
respectively unless the latter condescended to drape himself with five varieties
of clothing material, (hide, leaf, silk, wood and cotton) contrary to the 16th
century tika of K. Kundacharya's 'Shata Pahur' with respect to Apavada
Vesh.
28. Savants and
saints like Hiravijayji etc.