-
distinguished disciples of the Buddha. In
early Buddhism, a śrāvaka or
śrāvikā is a
disciple who accepts: the
Buddha as
their teacher the Buddha's teaching...
-
sadhu (monks),
sadhvi or
aryika (nuns),
sravaka (laymen householders) and
sravika (laywomen householders). As in Hinduism, the Jain
householders support...
- (male ascetics),
Aryika /
Sadhvi (female ascetics), Śrāvaka (laymen), and
Śrāvikā (laywomen). The word is also used in
various other ways.
Champat Rai Jain...
- muni (male monastics),
aryika (female monastics), Śrāvaka (layman) and
sravika (laywoman). This
order is
known as a sangha.[citation needed]. Many Jains...
- (female ascetics), 159,000
sravakas (male lay followers), and 318,000
sravikas (female lay followers). Jain
tradition mentions Srenika and
Kunika of Haryanka...
- Both sub-traditions have
mendicants supported by
laypersons (śrāvakas and
śrāvikas). The Śvētāmbara
tradition in turn has two sub-traditions: Deravasi, also...
-
bhikkhus and
bhikkhunis and male and
female laypersons, or śrāvakas and
śrāvikas, who take
limited vows.[citation needed] Jain and
Buddhist iconography...
- (male monastics),
aryika (female monastics), śrāvakas (male followers) and
śrāvikās (female followers). In Jainism,
there are two
kinds of votaries: The householder...
-
saints (sādhvis), male
householders (śrāvaka) and
female householders (
srāvika). The
first tirthankara of the
current time
cycle was Ṛṣabhanātha, and...
-
fourfold order of male and
female monastics, srāvakas (male followers) and
śrāvikās (female followers). The tirthankara's
teachings form the
basis for the...