From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adipurana deals with the ten lives of the first tirthankara, known as Vrishabhanatha. This work is known to be the first work of Kannada poet Adikavi Pampa (941 CE). It is based on the story narrated by Jinasenacharya in his earlier Sanskrit work Purvapurana. Vikramarjuna Vijaya and Adipurana are, in some respects, comparable to Milton's Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained.
Jain Scriptures |
|
Fourteen Purvas (The Prior Knowledge - considered totally lost) |
|
|
|
|
Angāgama |
|
|
Upanga āgamas |
Aupapātika · Rājapraśnīya · Jīvājīvābhigama · Prajñāpana · Sūryaprajñapti · Jambūdvīpaprajñapti · Candraprajñapti · Nirayārvalī · Kalpāvatamsikāh · Puspikāh · Puspacūlikāh · Vrasnidaśāh
|
|
Chedasūtra |
Ācāradaśāh · Brhatkalpa · Vyavahāra · Niśītha · Mahāniśītha · Jītakalpa
|
|
Mūlasūtra |
Daśavaikālika · Uttarādhyayana · Āvaśyaka · Pindaniryukyti
|
|
Prakīrnaka sūtra |
Catuhśarana · Āturapratyākhyanā · Bhaktaparijñā · Samstāraka · Tandulavaicarika · Candravedhyāka · Devendrastava · Ganividyā · Mahāpratyākhyanā · Vīrastava
|
|
Cūlikasūtra |
Nandī-sūtra · Anuyogadvāra-sūtra
|
|
|
|
Āgamas |
|
|
Pratham -ānuyoga |
Padmapurāna · Harivamsapurāna · Ādipurāna · Uttarapurāna
|
|
Carnānuyoga |
Mulācāra · Trivarnācāra · Ratnakaranda śrāvakācāra
|
|
Ganitānuyoga |
Sūryaprajñapti · Candraprajñapt · Jayadhavalātikā · Gommatasāra
|
|
Dravyānuyoga |
|
|
Commentary |
Commentary on Tattvarthasūtra and Aptmimamsa
|
|
Tattvārthasūtra is accepted by both Digambaras and Śvetāmbara as their texts although Śvetāmbaras do not include it under canonical texts. |
|