Vira Nirvana Samvat


The Vira Nirvana Samvat is a calendar era beginning on 7 October 527 BCE. It commemorates the Nirvana of Lord Mahaviraswami, the 24th Jain Tirthankara. This is one of the oldest system of chronological reckoning which is still used in India.

History

The earliest text to mention 527 BCE as the year of Lord Vardhaman Mahavira's Nirvana is Yati-Vrishabha's Tiloya-Pannatti. Subsequent works such as Jinasena's Harivamśa mention the Vira Nirvana era, and give the difference between it and the Shaka era as 603 years, 5 months & 8 Days.
On 13 November 1974 the 2500th Nirvana Mahotsava was celebrated by the Jains throughout India and overseas

Usage

The Jain year Vira Nirvana Samvat is obtained by adding 470 years to the Kartikadi Vikram samvat. For example, The Vira Nirvana Samvat 2544 started right after Diwali of 20 October 2017 on Vikram 2074, Kartika Krishna Amavasya. The new Chaitradiadi Vikram samvat starts seven months earlier in Chaitra, thus during Chaitra-Kartika Krishna, the difference between Vikram and Vir Nivana samvat is 469 years.
The Jain business people traditionally started their accounting year from Dipawali. The relationship between the Vir and Shaka era is given in Titthogali Painnaya and Dhavalaa by Acharya Virasena:
Thus the Nirvana occurred 603 years, 5 months and 8 days before the Saka era.

Jain Calendar

The Jain calendar is a lunisolar calendar, just like the traditional Vikarm or Saka calendars. The months based on the position of the Moon with respect to the Earth and it is adjusted by adding an extra month once every three years, to coincide with the Sun to bring month in phase with the season. Its day or date which is known as Tithi, indicates the moon phase and the month indicates the approximate season of the solar year.
The lunisolar calendar has the following arrangement:
A regular or normal year has 12 months; a leap year has 13 months.
A regular or normal year has 353, 354, or 355 days; a leap year has 383, 384, or 385 days.
The months in a Jain calendar are - Kartak, Maagsar, Posh, Maha, Faagan, Chaitra, Vaishakh, Jeth, Ashadh, Shravan, Bhadarvo, Aaso.
The average number of days in a month is 30 but the average number of days in a Lunisolar year is 354 and not 360 because it takes the Moon about 29.5 days to complete the circle around the Earth. Hence one Tithi is eliminated in about duration of two months.
The Hebrew, Hindu lunar, Buddhist, and Tibetan calendars are all lunisolar, and so were the Japanese calendars until 1873 and the Chinese calendars until 1912.
The Islamic calendar is a pure Lunar Calendar because its date indicates the moon phase but its months are not in phase with the time of the solar year or the season. It does not adjust its calendar to coincide with the sun or the season. Hence no extra month is added every three years.
The Gregorian calendar is a pure Solar Calendar and its date indicates the time of the solar season but not the moon phase.

Citations