There are 24 upavyūhas of Viṣṇu in the Pāñcarātra tradition, distinguished by the order in which their four hands display the discus, conch, club and lotus flower. (I regret that I have no textual source for this -- perhaps someone else does?)

Martin Gansten


Den 2015-08-25 kl. 10:19, skrev APPLETON Naomi:
Dear colleagues,

I am exploring the parallel notions of twenty-four past buddhas and twenty-four past jinas/tirthankaras. I have all the textual references and scholarly materials, as far as I am aware, but I lack expertise in the artistic sources. Does anybody know when or where we find the first appearance of twenty-four buddhas or jinas together? (I am aware of evidence for smaller numbers of past teachers in art from the Ashokan period onwards, but I am particularly interested in when the number 24 makes an appearance.)

In addition, is the number 24 at all significant in Vaisnava traditions? I am aware of the list of 24 avatāras in the Sikh Dasam Granth.

Many thanks as always for your help.

All the best,
Naomi
--------------------------------
Dr Naomi Appleton
Senior Lecturer, Asian Religions
School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh
naomi.appleton@ed.ac.uk

http://naomiappleton.wordpress.com
http://storyofstoryinsouthasia.wordpress.com
Twitter: @JatakaStories





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