Digambara Terapanth

Some Terapanthi practices, like not using flowers in worship, gradually spread throughout most of North Indian Jainism as well.

The poet Dyanatrai was associated with the Adhyatma movement.King Jai Singh II (1688–1743) of Amer kingdom built separate temples for the two sub-sects in his newly established capital of Jaipur.

Pandit Todarmal's son, Gumaniram, formed a sub-sect named Gumanapantha in 1770s and named it shuddha terapantha amana (pure terapantha tradition) by making the rules stricter.

[2] Bakhtaram in his "Mithyatva Khandan Natak" (1764) mentions[6] that group that started it included 13 individuals who collectively built a new temple, thus giving it its name Terapanth, which literally means "thirteen-panthan".

A letter of 1692 from Terapanthis at Kama to those at Sanganer mentions 13 rituals practices they rejected.

Amber Town, Jaipur