Pujyapada

Indian Jain monk (464–524)


title: "Pujyapada" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["jain-acharyas", "indian-jain-monks", "5th-century-indian-jains", "5th-century-jain-monks", "5th-century-indian-monks", "6th-century-indian-jains", "6th-century-jain-monks", "6th-century-indian-monks", "464-births", "524-deaths"] description: "Indian Jain monk (464–524)" topic_path: "geography/india" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pujyapada" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Indian Jain monk (464–524) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox religious biography"]

FieldValue
honorific-prefixAcharya Shri 108
honorific-suffixJi Maharaj
imageDigambar.jpg
altPujyapada
captionDigambara Acharya
religionJainism
sectDigambara
birth_nameDevanandi
birth_date464 CE
death_date
fatherMadhava Bhatta
motherShridevi
worksSarvārthasiddhi, Iṣṭopadeśa
disciplesDurvinita
::

| honorific-prefix = Acharya Shri 108 | honorific-suffix = Ji Maharaj | image = Digambar.jpg | alt = Pujyapada | caption = Digambara Acharya | religion = Jainism | sect = Digambara | birth_name = Devanandi | birth_date = 464 CE | death_date = | father = Madhava Bhatta | mother = Shridevi | works = Sarvārthasiddhi, Iṣṭopadeśa | disciples = Durvinita Acharya Pujyapada or Pūjyapāda (464–524 CE) was a renowned grammarian and acharya (philosopher monk) belonging to the Digambara tradition of Jains. It was believed that he was worshiped by demigods on the account of his vast scholarship and deep piety, and thus, he was named Pujyapada. He was said to be the guru of King Durvinita of the Western Ganga dynasty.

Life

Pujyapada is dated to have lived around 510 CE to 600 CE. Born as Devanandi to parents Madhava Bhatta and Shridevi, he became a Digambara monk, as well as a yogi, mystic, poet, scholar, author and master of several branches of learning. He was born in a Jain Brahmans (In Jain philosophy, a pratimādhārī shravaka—a layperson with vows—is considered a Brahman)family of Karnataka.

He earned the title Pujyapada since he is considered to have devas from heaven come to do puja of his feet (pada). He was heavily influenced by the writings of earlier Digambaras like Kundakunda and Samantabhadra. He is regarded as the greatest of the early masters of Jain literature. He was a prominent preceptor, with an impeccable ancestry and spiritual lineage. He was the tenth guru of the lineage of the Nandi Sangha which began with Kundakunda.

It is likely that he was the first Jain saint to write not only on religion but also on non-religious subjects, such as Ayurveda and Sanskrit grammar, and was a master of Sanskrit poetics and of ayurveda. All of his works, both prose and verse, were written in Sanskrit.

In his Sarvarthasiddhi, Pujyapada defined Dāna (charity) as the act of giving one's wealth to another for mutual benefit.

Works

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/85/Istopadesa.jpg" caption="Book cover of one of the English translation of Iṣṭopadeśa"] ::

  • a concise work of 51 verses, it uses everyday examples to address ethical aspects of life. Acharya Pujyapada writes that one needs to realize the difference between the eternal soul and mutable body, the trivial and important, the essential and non-essential, to attain liberation. Without this realization, even devotion and meritous actions do not lead to liberation.
  • Sarvārthasiddhi is a commentary on the Tattvārthasūtra, noted for its precision and conciseness. It serves as the definitive mula patha for all Digambara works on the Tattvārthasūtra. It is the earliest surviving commentary on the Tattvārthasūtra, since the earlier commentary, the Gandhahastī Mahābhāṣya of Acharya Samantabhadra, is no longer extant.
  • considered one of the finest early works on Sanskrit grammar.**
  • It is a treatise of 106 verses on yoga and spiritual practice, outlining the path to liberation through differentiation of the soul from the body.
  • a collection of the adoration of the essentials that help the soul in acquiring merit. The essentials include the Supreme Beings, the Scripture, the Perfect Conduct, and the sacred places like the Nandīśvara Dvīpa.
  • A poem of 8 verses in adoration of Bhagavān Śāntinātha, the 16th Tīrthankara.
  • A work on Sanskrit grammar, said to be a gloss on Pāṇinī
  • Jainābhiṣeka (Jain Anointment) - A work on Jain rituals.
  • Chandaśāstra (Treatise on Prosody) - A work on Sanskrit prosody.

References

Citations

Sources

References

  1. Jain, Jyoti Prasad. (2005). "The Jaina Sources of the History of Ancient India".
  2. "Jaina Antiquary". Volume XVIII.1, pp 13-15.
  3. Introduction. Jain, Jaykumar.''Samadhitantra''. First edition, 2006.
  4. Page 98, Ibid.
  5. Jaini, Padmanabh S. (1998). The Jaina Path of Purification. p. 151.
  6. Page 98, Jain, Jyoti Prasad. ''The Jaina Sources of the History of Ancient India.'' Second, revised edition: 2005.
  7. Page 98, Ibid.

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jain-acharyasindian-jain-monks5th-century-indian-jains5th-century-jain-monks5th-century-indian-monks6th-century-indian-jains6th-century-jain-monks6th-century-indian-monks464-births524-deaths