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  2. Gopachal rock-cut Jain monuments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopachal_rock-cut_Jain...

    Several large Jain sculptures are placed within the Teli ka Mandir compound. The Gwalior city and the fort is connected to other Indian cities by major highways NH 44 and 46 (Asian Highway 43 and 47), a railway station and airport (IATA: GWL). It is located near other historic Hindu and Jain temples from the medieval era. [9] [10] [11]

  3. Siddhachal Caves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siddhachal_Caves

    The Jain cave temples within the Gwalior Fort were, however, not destroyed, just mutilated by chopping off the faces, the sexual organs and their limbs. Centuries later, the Jain community restored many of the statues by adding back stucco heads on the top of the damaged idols. [1]

  4. Jain sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jain_sculpture

    However the Jain tirthankara images can only be in one of the two format. In Padmasana, the statues of a Jina and a Buddha can be similar. The Buddha statue has folds of the cloth on the upperbody, with cloth behind the left arm, where as the Jina statue is without clothes, unless it is a Shwetambara image which shows "kandora" folds.

  5. List of tourist attractions in Gwalior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tourist...

    Siddhachal Caves are Jain cave monuments and statues carved into the rock face inside the Urvashi valley of the Gwalior Fort. Gujari Mahal also called Gwalior Fort Museum located in Gwalior Fort. It was built by Raja Man Singh Tomar for his wife Mrignayani, a Gujar princess. The Scindia School is situated in the

  6. Gwalior Fort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwalior_Fort

    The Fort of Gwalior or the Gwalior Fort is a defence hill fort in Gwalior, India. Mughal Emperor Babur called it the "pearl amongst the fortresses of Hind" because of its impregnability and magnificence and it has also been nicknamed the Gibraltar of India. [2] The history of the fort goes back to the 5th century or perhaps to a period still ...

  7. Gwalior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwalior

    Jain rock-cut sculptures of Siddhachal Caves – A striking part of the Jain remains at Gwalior is a series of caves or rock-cut sculptures, excavated in the rock on all sides, and numbering nearly a hundred, great and small. Most of them are mere niches to hold statues, though some are cells that may have been originally intended for residences.

  8. Kashtha Sangha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kashtha_Sangha

    The celebrated poet and pratishthacharya Raighu was a disciple of the Kashtha Sangh Bhattarakas of Gwalior. The rock carved Jain statues in the Gwalior Fort were mostly consecrated by the Kashtha Sangh Bhattarakas, as stated in the inscriptions dated between 1441 and 1474. [9] [10]

  9. Jain schools and branches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jain_schools_and_branches

    The rock carved Jain statues in the Gwalior Fort were mostly consecrated by the Kashtha Sangh Bhattarakas. The Digambar Terapanth subsect was formed by Amra Bhaunsa Godika and his son Jodhraj Godika during 1664–1667 in opposition to the bhattakaras.