the doctrine, to his own discomfort, was applied by a disciple to the practical question of bed-making.
The other we have already noted; it was led by Gośāla,[1] and its main tenet was Fatalism.
During the years that immediately followed the death of Sthūlabhadra three more schisms took place, seriously weakening the Jaina church. In 251 B.C. Aṣāḍhā Ācārya headed a schism called Avyakta, Four years later Aśvamitra left the Jaina community and became head of the Kṣaṇikavādī; and in 239 B.C. a Jaina called Gaṅga led a fifth schism.
The great schism had not, however, as yet taken place. It is interesting to remember that Bhadrabāhu had returned from South India to be head over the whole community, even over the refractory part that had taken to clothes; that he, the staunch believer in nakedness, had been followed by Sthūlabhadra, the clothed; and that this man in his turn was followed by a leader who discarded clothing.
Mahāgiri.Mahāgiri, the next head of the community after Sthūlabhadra’s death, is said to have revived ‘the ideal practice of nakedness’ which had fallen into disuse. During his rule two famous Jaina books are said to have been written: Tattvārtha Sūtra, by Umāsvāti, and the Pannavaṇā Sūtra (one of the Upāṇga), by Śyāmāċārya, who was himself a disciple of Umāsvāti. Mahāgiri’s rule is also noteworthy for his endeavours to bring the community back to their primitive faith and practice; he was a real ascetic and recognized that under Sthūlabhadra’s sway many abuses had crept into the order. It was doubtless this that had led so many of the community to drift away from it under the leaders of the schisms already mentioned. Mahāgiri was spurred on in his efforts after reform by the memory of a prophecy which foretold that after Sthūlabhadra the monks would become less strenuous in their lives. Samprati.He was defeated in his aims by the conversion of Samprati, grand-- ↑ See p. 58.