The monk Padmasundara was the first Jain scholar to visit Akbar's court. During his time there, he composed a Sanskrit treatise on aesthetics at the emperor's request and dedicated it to Akbar. When Padmasundara died, he left behind his personal collection of manuscripts, which Akbar later donated to the Jain community. Padmasundara's library almost certainly included a copy of the Kalpasutra, a text central to the Jain tradition that tells the life stories of the twenty-four Jinas.
According to a sixteenth-century source, "I [Akbar] deeply loved [the Jain monk] Padmasundara, moon of the learned, like a friend. Then, by the power of fate, he was taken by the gods. After that I grieved, as when a wishing tree in one's own garden has been felled by the wind."