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ID154553
Title ProperMemories of Yoginīpura
Other Title InformationDelhi's Digambara merchant community after Timur
LanguageENG
AuthorDe Clercq, Eva
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper discusses the lengthy eulogies (praśasti) framing the Apabhraṃśa-language compositions of Raïdhū, a Digambara Jaina from early-fifteenth-century Gwalior. In these praśastis, the patron of the work, his family and their noteworthy deeds are immortalised by the poet. Many of these patrons, all of them merchants, had ancestors living in Delhi, here named Yoginīpura, who seem to have migrated to Gwalior and elsewhere around the time of Timur's sack of Delhi in 1398. Despite its frequent mention, Yoginīpura itself is nowhere described by Raïdhū, possibly in order to avoid stirring up memories of Timur's onslaught just decades prior.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 40, No.3; Sep 2017: p.531-543
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2017-09 40, 3
Key WordsSocial history ;  Delhi Sultanate ;  Jainism ;  Apabhraṃśa ;  Firoz Shah Tughluq ;  Gwalior ;  Merchant Communities ;  Merchant–Ruler Relations ;  Praśasti ;  Raïdhū ;  Timur