Nivvāṇalīlāvaīkahā

Nivvāṇalīlāvaīkahā

The Nivvāṇalīlāvaīkahā (Nivvāṇa-līlāvaī-kahā) 'Story of the Final Emancipation of Līlāvatī' composed in 1036 by Jineshvara, a Jain monk. The work was composed in Jain Maharashtri, a Prakrit language. Jineshvara was a reformist of lax monasticism, and his work was considered highly conducive to liberation.
The primary purpose of Jain narrative literature was to edify lay people through amusement; consequently the stories are racy, and in some cases the moralising element is rather tenuous. The main feature of Jain narrative literature is its concern with past and future lives. There developed a genre of soul biography, the histories, over a succession of rebirths, of a group of characters who exemplified the vices of anger, pride, deceit, greed and delusion.
A Sanskrit abridgement of Nivvāṇalīlāvaīkahā was made by Jinaratna, pupil of Jineshvara, by the title Līlāvatīsāra.


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  • Jinaratna — (Jina·ratna जिनरत्न) was a Jain scholar monk who composed Līlāvatīsāra. He completed his poem in the year 1285 CE in Jabaliputra, western India, (modern Jhalor in Rajasthan) it is an epitome of a much larger work called IAST|Nivvāṇalīlāvaīkahā… …   Wikipedia

  • The Epitome of Lilavati — Līlāvatīsāra (Līlāvatī sāra लीलावतीसार) epitome of Līlāvatī (composed by Jinaratna) tells the stories of the lives of a group of souls as they pass through a series of embodiments on their way to final liberation from the continual cycle of death …   Wikipedia

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