Pārśvanātha

Pārśvanātha
The ancient idol of Parshvanatha at Shankheshwar, Gujarat
Other namesPārśva, Pārasanātha
Venerated inJainism
PredecessorNeminatha
SuccessorMahavira
SymbolSnake
Height9 cubits (13.5 feet) (traditional)
Age100 years (traditional)
TreeAshok
ColorGreen
Genealogy
Bornc. 872 BCE (traditional)
Diedc. 772 BCE (traditional)
Parents
  • Aśvasena (father)
  • Vāmādevī (mother)
SpousePrabhāvatī, daughter of Kuśasthala’s Prasenajit (Shvetambara)
Unmarried (Digambara)
DynastyUgravaṁśa—Ikṣvākuvaṁśa

Pārśvanātha (Sanskrit: पार्श्वनाथः), or Pārśva and Pārasanātha, was the 23rd of 24 tīrthaṅkaras ("Ford-Maker" or supreme preacher of Dharma) of Jainism. Pārśvanātha is the earliest Jaina tīrthaṅkara who is acknowledged as probably a historical figure, with some teachings attributed to him that may be accurately recorded, and a possible historical nucleus within the legendary accounts of his life from traditional hagiographies. Historians consider that he may have lived between c. 8th to 6th century BCE, founding a proto-Jaina ascetic community which subsequently got revived and reformed by Mahāvīra (6th or 5th century BCE).

According to traditional Jaina narratives, he was born to King Aśvasena and Queen Vāmādevī of the Ikshvaku dynasty in the Indian city of Varanasi, 273 years before Mahāvīra, which places him between the 9th and 8th centuries BCE. Renouncing worldly life, he founded an ascetic community. He was the spiritual successor of the 22nd Tirthankar Neminatha. He is popularly seen as a supreme propagator and reviver of Jainism. Pārśvanātha is said to have attained moksha on Mount Sammeda (Madhuban, Jharkhand) popular as Parasnath hill in the Ganges basin, an important Jaina pilgrimage site. His iconography is notable for the serpent hood over his head, and his worship often includes Dharaṇendra and Padmāvatī (Jainism's serpent Devtā and Devī).

Texts of the two major Jaina sects differ on the teachings of Pārśvanath and Mahāvīra. The Digambaras believe that there was no difference between the teachings of Pārśvanātha and Mahāvīra. According to the Śvētāmbaras, Mahāvīra expanded Pārśvanātha's first four restraints with his ideas on ahimsa (lit.'non-violence') and added the fifth monastic vow (celibacy). Pārśvanātha did not require celibacy and allowed monks to wear simple outer garments.