Vasudeva-hindi
Author | Sangha-dasa Gani |
---|---|
Original title | वसुदेव-हिण्डी |
Country | India |
Language | Archaic Maharashtri Prakrit |
Subject | Adventures of Vasudeva |
Publication date | possibly 473 CE |
Vasudeva-hindi (
Authorship and date
Vasudeva-hindi is the oldest surviving text of the Jain narrative literature. The Jain monk Sangha-dasa wrote it in archaic Maharashtri Prakrit language.[1] The author claims that the legend of Vasudeva was first told by Mahavira's pupil Sudharman to his disciple Jambu, and since then, the story was transmitted to the author through a series of teachers and disciples.[1]
The text was definitely composed before 610 CE, when Jina-bhadra-gani Kshama-shramana refers to it in his Visheshana Vati. The author dates the text to the year 530 of an unspecified
Some parts of the text, such as Dhammilla-hindi, are a later addition to the original text.[3]
The second layer of the frame story in the text names Mahavira as a narrator, which is a way of legitimizing the story as true. The naming of a king (instead of a Jain disciple) as the listener suggests that the text was aimed at an urban audience rather than monks.[1]
Contents
The text narrates the legend of
The text progresses to the main story as follows:[1]
Layer | Narrator | Story |
---|---|---|
1 | Conversation between the Jain monk Suhamma and King Konia | |
2 | Suhamma | Conversation between Mahavira and Konia's father, King Senia of Raya-giha
|
3 | Mahavira | Story of king Vasudeva's grandsons |
4 | Vasudeva | Vasudeva tells his grandsons about his adventures |
Layer 4 contains the main story of Vasudeva's adventures, which is interspersed with secondary stories that talk about the Jain faith and its 63 illustrous persons. The narrative layers containing these secondary stories go still deeper. For example, in one of the narrative layers, Vasudeva refuses to marry the grand-daughter of an old woman because of her low social status. The old woman then talks about the origins of her family, narrating the story of her ancestor Usabha.[1]
Layer | Narrator | Story |
---|---|---|
5 | The old woman | Story of Jina Usabha. |
6 | Sijjamsa | Story of the previous births of Usabha and his donor Sijjamsa (Shreymsa) as twins in the Uttarakurus .
|
7 | The female twin | Story of the twins' previous births as the god Laliyamga and his wife Sayam-pabha. |
8 | Laliyamga | Story of Laliyamga's previous birth as King Mahabala. |
9 | Sayambuddha | Mahabala's friend Sayambuddha tells him a series of moral stories. |
The narrative then goes back to the main story as follows:[1]
Layer | Narrator | Story |
---|---|---|
8 | Laliyamga | Story of Laliyamga's previous birth as King Mahabala, continued: Mahabala renounces the world, practices extreme austerity, and dies. |
7 | The female twin | Story of the twins' previous births, continued: Laliyamga and Sayam-pabha die and are reborn as prince Vairajamgha and princess Sirimai. |
8 | Sirimai | Sirimai remembers her previous birth as Sayam-pabha and her existence as Niāmiyā (Nirnāmikā, "a girl with no name"). |
7 | The female twin | Story of the twins' previous births, continued: Vairajamgha and Sirimai marry and live happily before being poisoned by their son. |
6 | Sijjamsa | Stories of several previous births of the twins:
Sijjamsa recalls that after their birth as gods, they were born as Usabha and Sijjamsa. |
5 | The old woman | Story of Usabha, continued: Usabha preaches the dharma. |
4 | Vasudeva | Vasudeva continues to narrate stories of his adventures, with each story containing multi-layer sub-stories. |
Unlike other texts, such as the Mahabharata, Vasudeva-hindi does not remind the reader of the main frame story or any sub-frame story at any point. According to scholar Anna Aurelia Esposito, Vasudeva-hindi deliberately confuses the readers with such complex layers to cause them to "experience the sensation to be completely lost – lost not only in this thicket of stories, but also in the complex and incomprehensible nature of the world."[1]
References
- ^ ISBN 9781317151425.
- ISBN 9780199739578.
- ^ J.C. Jain (1975). B.J. Sandesara (ed.). "Is Vasudevahiṇḍī a Jain version of the Bṛhatkathā ?". Journal of the Oriental Institute. 23. Oriental Institute, Baroda: 62–63.
- ISBN 9788120804494.
- ISBN 9788120839052.
- ISBN 81-215-0931-9.
Further reading
- OCLC 469480884.
External links
- Vasudeva-hindi text in Devanagari script
- Dharmasenagani Mahattara's Vasudevahimdi Madhyama Khanda Part 1