Posted on: 3 January 2012

Digital Rare Book:
An Interpretation Of Jain Ethics
A lecture by Dr.Charlotte Krause
Published by Phulchandji Ved, Bhavnagar - 1929

Image:
Jain Siddha Bahubali, Entwined with Forest Vines
Source: Metropolitan Museum of Art


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Read Book Online : http://www.archive.org/stream/interpretationof032068mbp#page/n3/mode/2up

Download pdf Book: http://ia700307.us.archive.org/6/items/interpretationof032068mbp/interpretationof032068mbp.pdf

Image details: Jain Siddha Bahubali, Entwined with Forest Vines Period: Chalukyan period Date: late 6th–7th century Culture: India (Karnataka) Medium: Copper alloy The oldest Jain image in the Metropolitan Museum's collection also happens to be the earliest known representation of the subject in Jain art, that of Bahubali, a prince who attained the stature of a perfected being (siddha). Although never admitted to the pantheon of twenty-four tirthankaras, he nonetheless attained jina-like status. The legend of Bahubali tells of a prince who renounces violence after coming close to slaying his brother Bharata in a battle of succession and then renounces pride and its expression—violence to other living creatures. Embracing ahimsa (nonviolence), he meditates in the "body-abandonment" posture in a forest, where he is entwined by vines and hosts birds that nest in his hair until he attains moksha. This diminutive icon is part of a tradition that inspired the largest rock-cut icon in the Indian subcontinent, the Bahubali at Shravana Belgola, in Karnataka, a sixty-foot-high image sculpted from living rock in the tenth century. This icon has been ritually lustrated in the mahamastakabhisheka festival since that date on a twelve-year cycle, most recently celebrated in 2006. Source: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York