- Cāmuṇḍarāya or
Chavundaraya (Kannada Cāmuṇḍarāya, Cāvuṇḍarāya, 940–989) was an
Indian Jain ruler. He
served in the
court of the
Western Ganga dynasty of...
- to
which literature in
Kannada and
Sanskrit flourished.
Chavundaraya's writing,
Chavundaraya Purana of 978 CE, is an
important work in
Kannada prose....
-
listed the
Chavundaraya basadi in
group of
monuments in
Shravanabelagola as
Adarsh Smarak Monument.
Chavundaraya basadi was
erected by
Chavundaraya during...
-
statue was
commissioned by the
Ganga dynasty minister and
commander Chavundaraya.
Neighbouring areas have Jain
temples known as
basadis and
several images...
- Gommateshvara,
built in 981 CE by the
Ganga minister and
commander Chavundaraya, is
situated on a
hilltop in
Shravanabelagola in Karnataka. This statue...
-
statue was
commissioned by the
Ganga dynasty minister and
commander Chavundaraya; it is 57-foot (17 m) tall and is
situated above a hill in Shravanabelagola...
-
dynasty of Manyakheta.
Chandragiri also has a
famous temple built by
Chavundaraya. The 58-feet tall
monolithic statue of
Gommateshwara is
located on Vindyagiri...
- same epics.
Famous among Jain
writers were
Adikavi Pampa, Sri Ponna,
Chavundaraya, Ranna,
Gunavarma I, Nagachandra, Nayasena,
Nagavarma I, Aggala, Janna...
- Jain
basadis are
found on the Hill. Some of the
prominent ones are:
Chavundaraya Basadi Chandragupta Basadi Shantinatha Basadi Parshvanatha Basadi Kattale...
- Shivakotiacharya,
mentions "iddalige",
prepared only from a
black gram batter.
Chavundaraya II, the
author of the
earliest available Kannada encyclopedia, Lokopakara...