Bhuvanbhanusuri
Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri was a Śvetāmbara Mūrtipūjaka Jain Acharya of the Tapa Gaccha and a disciple of Ācārya Premsūri. He was active during the twentieth century and is documented in academic and institutional sources in connection with a Tapāgaccha monastic grouping that came to be identified as the “Bhuvanbhānusūri Samudāy”. He is also credited with a substantial body of published works and educational material issued through Jain institutional publishers, including texts in Gujarati, Hindi, and English.Early life
Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri was born in Vikram Samvat 1968, corresponding to 1911 CE, in Ahmedabad. Jain institutional biographical records identify his pre-monastic name as Kantibhai. He was the second son of Chimanbhai and Bhuriben. These details are recorded in Gujarati-language institutional author profiles connected with Jain publishing trusts. Independent academic demographic studies also list him with the same birth year and death year, identifying him as “Bhuvan Bhanu Suri ”.Renunciation and monastic initiation
Institutional Jain biographies describe Kantibhai as having renounced household life and received monastic initiation under Ācārya Premsūri. Upon initiation, he entered Śvetāmbara Mūrtipūjaka monastic discipline and assumed the monastic name Muni Bhanu Vijayaji. The initiation is described as acceptance of Charitradharma at the feet of his guru. Across institutional catalogues and author records, Ācārya Premsūri is consistently identified as his guru, and Śvetāmbara Mūrtipūjaka practice is identified as his sectarian affiliation.Monastic career
Following initiation, Bhuvanbhānusūri pursued a monastic career consistent with Śvetāmbara Mūrtipūjaka discipline. Institutional sources associate him with itinerant monastic practice, chāturmāsa observances, and sustained engagement with religious instruction. While independent academic sources do not provide detailed itineraries of his travels, his monastic activity is reflected extensively through his literary output and his later role within monastic organisational structures.
Throughout his monastic life, he was engaged in religious education and authorship. Jain institutional catalogues attribute a large number of publications to him, indicating sustained literary activity over several decades. These publications address doctrinal explanation, ethical instruction, narrative literature, and educational material designed for lay audiences and children.Elevation to Acharya
Institutional biographies record that Bhuvanbhānusūri was elevated to the rank of Acharya on the second day of the month of Mārgashīrsha in Vikram Samvat 2029, corresponding to 7 December 1972 CE. From this date onward, he is referred to in institutional and cataloguing records as “Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri” or “Bhuvanbhanu Soorishwarji”. His Acharyaship situates him among the senior monastic leadership associated with the Premsūri lineage within the Tapa Gaccha.Organisational role and the 1986 division
Academic demographic documentation records a significant organisational division within a Premsūri-associated Śvetāmbara monastic grouping in 1986. This division is described as arising from disagreements concerning calendrical observance, specifically the ek tithi and be tithi systems. The dispute is recorded as involving Ram Candra Suri and Bhuvan Bhanu Suri and resulted in the division of the Premsūri Samudāy into two principal sections in that year.
The same academic source records that one of the resulting sections was renamed after Bhuvan Bhanu Suri and notes that this followed a break between Bhuvan Bhanu Suri and Ram Candra Suri in 1986. Within the limits of the documented material, this establishes Bhuvanbhānusūri’s association with the formation and naming of a distinct monastic grouping following the division.Bhuvanbhānusūri Samudāy
The designation “Bhuvanbhānusūri Samudāy” is supported by academic demographic records that describe a post-1986 monastic branch being renamed after Bhuvan Bhanu Suri. Institutional catalogues and later Jain publications continue to use his name as a monastic identifier, reflecting the persistence of this designation in organisational and bibliographic contexts. The sources describe this samudāy as a recognised grouping within the broader Śvetāmbara Mūrtipūjaka monastic landscape, without attributing doctrinal innovation to it beyond its organisational identity.Literary activity
Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri is credited with an extensive body of written work. Jain institutional author profiles attribute at least seventy-two published books to him. These works were issued primarily through Jain publishing trusts and are listed in institutional ebook platforms, manuscript catalogues, and library databases. His publications span Gujarati, Hindi, and English and cover a range of formats, including doctrinal handbooks, encyclopaedic compilations, narrative biographies, and educational texts.Handbook of Jainology
A Handbook of Jainology is listed in Jain e-Library catalogues as an English-language work authored by Bhuvanbhānusūri and published by Divya Darshan Trust in 2006. The catalogue entry provides bibliographic confirmation of authorship and publication details and situates the work within contemporary Jain educational literature.Sachitra Mahāvīra Charitra
Publisher catalogues list Sachitra Mahāvīra Charitra as a pictorial biography of Mahāvīra attributed to Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri. The work is described as bilingual or multilingual and published by Divya Darshan Trust. Catalogue descriptions list the work as 126 pages in length and identify it as an illustrated educational biography.Amidrishti – The Divine Attitude
Book trade listings attribute Amidrishti – The Divine Attitude to Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri. The work is listed in English-language catalogues and identified as authored by him in commercial book listings, providing further evidence of his authorship across multiple publication contexts.Kailāsasāgara Gaṇita
Jain manuscript and library catalogues list Bhuvanbhānusūri as a translator for Kailāsasāgara Gaṇita. The catalogue associates the publication with Divya Darshan Trust, Mumbai, and records his role as a contributor to the Gujarati edition of the text.Bhuvanbhanu Encyclopedia
Institutional ebook listings identify Bhuvanbhanu Encyclopedia, Part 1 as a Gujarati-language compilation authored by Bhuvanbhānusūri. The work is presented as part of a multi-volume encyclopaedic series and is associated with Divya Darshan Trust publications. Catalogue metadata identifies the author and sectarian affiliation as Śvetāmbara.Educational initiatives
Organisational articles credit Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri with creating a series of illustrated religious picture stories for children approximately five decades prior to their documentation. These materials are described as a structured series intended to communicate Jain narratives and values to younger audiences through pictorial presentation. The initiative is referenced as part of his broader engagement with educational outreach and religious instruction.Disciples and lineage
Sources acknowledge that Bhuvanbhānusūri had disciples within the Śvetāmbara Mūrtipūjaka Tapa Gaccha tradition. Academic demographic studies situate him within a recognised monastic lineage but do not enumerate named disciples. Institutional biographies refer to disciples in general terms without providing comprehensive, independently verifiable lists.Death
Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri died in 1993. His death year is consistently recorded in academic demographic studies and institutional biographical listings and forms part of the standard biographical identifiers associated with his name.Legacy
Based on the documented sources, Acharya Bhuvanbhānusūri’s legacy is anchored in three principal areas: his association with the formation and naming of a distinct monastic grouping following the 1986 division; his extensive body of published works credited in institutional and library catalogues; and his role in producing educational and illustrated materials for Jain religious instruction, including works aimed at children. These aspects are consistently reflected across academic demographic records, Jain institutional publications, and bibliographic catalogues.