It is requested that this article (or a section of this article) be expanded.
See the request at Wikipedia:Requests for expansion or elsewhere on this talk page. Image File history File links Wikipedia Logo File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Lord Rishabha or Rishabanath who was the first Tirthankar of Jainism. He is also known as Aadinaath and is considered simiar to Lord Shiva of Hinduism and Abraham. In Jainism, a Tirthankar (Fordmaker) is a human who by adopting asceticism achieves enlightenment (perfect knowledge), thus becoming a Jina (one who has conquered his inner enemies - anger, pride, deceit, desire etc. ... The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolizes the Jain Vow of Ahimsa, meaning non-injury and non-violence. ... This article is about the Hindu God. ... Hinduism (सनातन धरà¥à¤®; also known as SanÄtana Dharma, and Vaidika-Dharma) is a worldwide religious tradition that is based on the bed-rock of the Vedas. ... Abraham (×Ö·×ְרָ×Ö¸× Father/Leader of many, Standard Hebrew Avraham, Tiberian Hebrew ʾAá¸rÄhÄm; Arabic ابراÙÙÙ IbrÄhÄ«m) is the patriarch of Judaism, recognized by Christianity, and a very important prophet in Islam. ...
Lord Rişhabha (other names used: Rişhabh, Rişhabhanāth, Rishabh Dev,Rushabh, Adinath or Adishwar) is considered the first Tirthankar of Jainism.
LordRishabha has been mentioned in the Hindu text of Bhagavatha-Purana as an Avatar of Lord Vishnu.
Some of the attributes of Lord Adinath are similar to Shiva of Hinduism, long hair, association with bull (the mark of Lord Adinath), meditation in the Himalayas (Ashtapad in Jain tradition is identified with Kailash), etc.