📌 Topic 02 of 6 · Chapter 04 · Mahajanapadas, Jainism & Buddhism
Jainism — Mahavira & Teachings
24 Tirthankaras, Mahavira’s life, Triratna, Anekantavada, Ahimsa, Jain sects — Digambara vs Shvetambara.
📖 Jainism — Overview
Jainism is one of the oldest religions in the world, originating in ancient India. It emphasises non-violence (Ahimsa), truth, and non-attachment as the path to liberation. Jainism does not believe in a creator God — liberation is achieved through one’s own efforts.
🙏 24 Tirthankaras
Jainism recognises 24 Tirthankaras (ford-makers/spiritual teachers) who have attained liberation and shown the path to others:
- First Tirthankara: Rishabhadeva (Adinatha) — considered the founder of Jainism
- 23rd Tirthankara: Parshvanatha — historical figure; taught four vows (Ahimsa, Satya, Asteya, Aparigraha)
- 24th Tirthankara: Vardhamana Mahavira — last and most important; added Brahmacharya as fifth vow
👑 Mahavira — Life & Times
- Birth: 599 BCE at Kundagrama (near Vaishali, Bihar)
- Parents: Siddhartha (Kshatriya chief) and Trishala
- Childhood name: Vardhamana
- At age 30: Renounced worldly life; became an ascetic
- At age 42: Attained Kevala Jnana (omniscience/enlightenment) at Jrimbhikagrama under a Sal tree
- Titles: Mahavira (Great Hero), Jina (Conqueror), Nirgrantha (free from bonds)
- Death: 527 BCE at Pavapuri (Bihar) — attained Nirvana
- Contemporary of: Bimbisara, Ajatashatru, Gautama Buddha
⭐ Key Fact: Mahavira was a Kshatriya (warrior class), not a Brahmin. Both Mahavira and Buddha were Kshatriyas who challenged Brahmanical dominance. Mahavira’s mother Trishala was the sister of Lichchhavi chief Chetaka — connecting him to the Vajji republic.
☸️ Mahavira’s Teachings
1. Triratna (Three Jewels)
- Samyak Darshana — Right Faith (belief in Jain teachings)
- Samyak Jnana — Right Knowledge (understanding of Jain philosophy)
- Samyak Charitra — Right Conduct (following the five vows)
2. Five Great Vows (Pancha Mahavrata)
| Vow | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ahimsa | Non-violence — do not harm any living being |
| Satya | Truth — always speak truth |
| Asteya | Non-stealing — do not take what is not given |
| Brahmacharya | Celibacy — added by Mahavira (Parshvanatha had only 4 vows) |
| Aparigraha | Non-possession — do not accumulate possessions |
3. Key Philosophical Concepts
- Anekantavada — doctrine of many-sidedness; truth has multiple aspects; no single perspective is complete
- Syadvada — doctrine of conditional predication; “maybe” — every statement is conditional
- Karma — physical particles that bind the soul; liberation requires shedding karma
- Jiva (soul) and Ajiva (non-soul) — two fundamental categories of reality
- Moksha — liberation achieved by shedding all karma through right faith, knowledge, and conduct
⚔️ Jain Sects — Digambara vs Shvetambara
| Feature | Digambara (Sky-clad) | Shvetambara (White-clad) |
|---|---|---|
| Clothing | Monks go naked (sky is their garment) | Monks wear white clothes |
| Women | Women cannot attain moksha in female body | Women can attain moksha |
| Mahavira | Mahavira was married and had a daughter | Mahavira was never married |
| Split | ~300 BCE (after Chandragupta Maurya’s time) | ~300 BCE |
| Region | South India (Karnataka, Tamil Nadu) | North and West India (Gujarat, Rajasthan) |
📝 Exam Tip:
• Mahavira = 24th Tirthankara; born 599 BCE; died 527 BCE
• Parshvanatha = 23rd Tirthankara; taught 4 vows (Mahavira added Brahmacharya)
• Triratna = Right Faith + Right Knowledge + Right Conduct
• Anekantavada = many-sidedness of truth
• Digambara = sky-clad (naked); Shvetambara = white-clad
• Mahavira = 24th Tirthankara; born 599 BCE; died 527 BCE
• Parshvanatha = 23rd Tirthankara; taught 4 vows (Mahavira added Brahmacharya)
• Triratna = Right Faith + Right Knowledge + Right Conduct
• Anekantavada = many-sidedness of truth
• Digambara = sky-clad (naked); Shvetambara = white-clad