Adinatha, — the First Lord of this cosmic age.
ऋषभनाथ · Rishabhanatha Bhagwan
Father of human civilization. Founder of the Ikshvaku dynasty. Ford-maker who first illumined the path from suffering to liberation. A primordial teacher whose grace shaped the soul of Bharatavarsha.
Before the dawn of recorded ages — He arose to teach humanity how to live.
When the wish-fulfilling kalpavriksha trees of the cosmic golden age began to wane, mankind stood bewildered before a new world it could not comprehend. Out of that twilight rose Rishabhanatha — son of King Nabhi and Marudevi — the first to teach agriculture, governance, craft, language, ethics and contemplation. He drew the first lines of civilization, then walked beyond them to attain absolute liberation.
As the inaugural ford-maker (Tirthankara) of this descending half-cycle, his grace established the perennial path that twenty-three successors after him have continued to illuminate.
A life that became a civilization.
A name that resounds across
twenty-four sacred lifetimes.
Across the Jain canon he is honoured by many names — each opening a different window onto his being. He is Adinatha, the First Lord. Aadishvara, the First Jina. Yugadideva, the deity at the dawn of an age. Nabheya, son of Nabhi. Ikshvaku, progenitor of kings.
Each title is a doorway. Together they form the architecture of a being so immense that no single epithet can contain him.
Read Full BiographyHe who conquers his own self — by self, for self, through self — is the conqueror of all sorrow, the architect of his own liberation, and the truest lord of every kingdom.
The eternal path of liberation, first revealed to mankind.
Rishabhanatha gave humanity its first systematic discipline of conduct — non-violence (Ahimsa), truth (Satya), non-stealing (Asteya), continence (Brahmacharya) and non-possession (Aparigraha) — bound together by the three jewels of right faith, right knowledge and right conduct.
Study the TeachingsFrom cosmic dawn to Moksha.
Five movements that shaped history — and the soul of Bharata.
Born to King Nabhi and Queen Marudevi
The fourteenth and final Manu of the descending age, King Nabhi, fathers the soul who will become the first ford-maker. Marudevi sees fourteen auspicious dreams.


The First Sovereign of Civilization
He teaches mankind agriculture, art, script, mathematics and law. Daughters Brahmi and Sundari receive the first letters and numbers. The Ikshvaku dynasty is born.
The Great Withdrawal
At the height of his sovereignty he renounces the throne, removes his royal ornaments and walks alone into the forest — choosing the inward kingdom over every outer one.


Omniscience Beneath the Banyan
After a thousand years of austerity he attains Kevala Jnana — pure, infinite knowledge. He becomes a Jina, conqueror of self, and begins the first Samavasarana.
Moksha at Mount Ashtapada
His final liberation upon the sacred peak of Ashtapada inaugurates the tradition of the twenty-four Tirthankaras. The path is open. The ford is made.
