Guest guest Posted May 10, 2005 Report Share Posted May 10, 2005 jainfriends, "Mahavir" <msanglikar> wrote: KASAMALAGI/ BANGALORE: Kasmalagi, a small village of 1,600 people, is hogging the limelight after an eleventh century statue of lord Parshwanath, the 23rd Tirthankar (Supreme God) of Jains, was recovered while digging a foundation in a school. It was a moment of joy as well as anxiety for the construction workers when they saw a flat stone under the mud. Slowly the dark green-coloured monolithic statue of Parshwanath emerged to sight. A sea of devotees have begun thronging the small village to see the idol. Archaeologists from Kittur have confirmed that the idol belongs to the 11th century. The idol looks great even though it has been buried for nearly 1,000 years. Small sculptures of Yaksha, Yakshi, (Dharanendra and Padamavatidevi) are carved at the feet of the statue, which also has an inscription in ancient Kannada (Halegannada), that reads: ``This statue has been carved by Hamashetty, disciple of Chandabhata of Tribhuvan Basadi (Jain temple), in Kesharmenage (Kasamalagi)''. Bhupal Savant of Kasamalagi told this website's newspaper, ``Large crowds come here day and night. Devotees from neighbouring villages come in tractors, bullock-carts and other vehicles, too.'' Writer and historian Chidanand Murthy said that the district of Belgaum was once a famous Jain centre. The area between Hukkeri and Nippani was dotted with many Jain study centres in the past. ``There are likely to be other Jain sculptures in Belgaum. What is required is sound research and excavation in nearby areas'', said Murthy. Priest of Parshwanath Jain Mandir P Shantinath said three other statues in green marble, similar to the new one, were earlier recovered in Aminabhavi and Ibrahimpur. ``The Yaksha-Yakshi engraving on the statue prove that the tradition of worshipping them was, indeed, very ancient'', said Shanthinath. He added that the theory behind yaksha worship had always been controversial. Kasamalagi is situated 465 km from Bangalore on NH-4 and 56 km from Belgaum, the nearest district headquarters. Belgaum is well connected by rail, road and air. Distances: Kittur-14km, Beedi- 1km. --- End forwarded message --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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