thumb|Indrabhuti Gautama ganadhara of [[Mahavira painting from Śrīpāla-kathā, 15th century]]
thumb|Indrabhuti Gautama ganadhara of [[Mahavira painting from Śrīpāla-kathā, 15th century]]
In Jainism, the term Ganadhara is used to refer the chief disciple of a Tirthankara. In samavasarana, the Tīrthankara sat on a throne without touching it (about two inches above it). Around, the Tīrthankara sits the Ganadharas. According to Digambara tradition, only a disciple of exceptional brilliance and accomplishment (riddhi) is able to fully assimilate, without doubt, delusion, or misapprehension, the anekanta teachings of a Tirthankara. The presence of such a disciple is mandatory in the samavasarana before Tirthankara delivers his sermons. Ganadhara interpret and mediate to other people the divine sound (divyadhwani) which the Jains claim emanates from Tirthankara's body when he preaches.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).