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Vardhamana Mahavira - Myrtle Langley

Vardhamana, known to his followers as Mahavira (the Great Hero), was an elder contemporary of the Buddha. Although the legends surrounding his life are less attractive than those surrounding the Buddha’s being even more formalized and unreliable, he was undoubtedly a historical person. Under the name of Nigantha Nataputta, he is often mentioned in the Buddhist scriptures as one of the Buddha’s chief opponents.

The second son of Siddhartha, a Kshatriya chieftain, Mahavira was born around 540 BC at Kundagrama, near modern Patna in Bihar, and died in 468 BC (according to scholarly opinion; tradition says 599-527 BC). On both sides of the family he belonged to the ruling warrior classes which were a powerful force at the time. Educated as a prince, according to one tradition Mahavira remained a bachelor for life; according to another he married a princess who bore him a daughter. Either way, at the age of 28, on the death of his parents, he renounced his family life to become a beggar and ascetic, seeking liberation from the dreary round of birth, death and rebirth.

At first he followed the ascetic practices of a group founded some 250 years earlier by a certain Parsva. Parsva is known as the 23rd and Mahavira as the 24th of the Tirthankaras, the ‘Ford-makers’, ‘Path-makers’ or great teachers of Jainism, who guide their followers across the river of transmigration. For over 12 years Mahavira wandered from place to place, living a life of the greatest austerity and engaging in disputation. At first he wore only a single loincloth, but after 13 months he discarded even that encumbrance and for the rest of his life went about naked.

© A Lion Handbook "The World’s Religions" published by Lion Publishing Plc, Sandy Lane West, Oxford, England. Reprinted with permission.

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