Showing posts with label Mahavamsa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mahavamsa. Show all posts

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Buddhism arrives in Sri Lanka (Poson)

Sri Lanka has long been important as a repository of the Buddha's teaching.

Today is the Poson (June) full moon observance day commemorating when the Arhat Mahinda together with his enlightened sister, Ven. Sanghamitta, children of the Indian Buddhist Emperor Asoka, brought the Dharma from India to the island of Sri Lanka.

They arrived in what is now the hamlet of Mihintale (Ambastala) with the monastics Ittiya Uttiya, Sambala, Bhaddasala, and the novice Sumana and the lay disciple Bhanduka.
 
The Buddhist Chronicles, the Mahavamsa, state that following the first Buddhist Council held under the patronage of King Dharmashoka, Buddhist missionaries were sent to sent countries. They were most successful in Sri Lanka as the then King Devanampiyatissa and the local people were very receptive. A revival took place in the religious, social, cultural, and economic aspects of the country with the spread of Buddhism. It was through the light provided by Buddhism that Sri Lankans could stand independently.

The full moon observance day Dharma sermon (bana) regularly organized at the Temple Trees was held at the President's House in Anuradhapura. The Chief Abbot (Sangha Nayaka) of the Ramanna school in the north-central province, Ven. Pothane Dhammananda Thera, delivered the sermon. 

(LINK)
 
Pres. Mahinda Rajapaksa, First Lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa, ministers, and parliamentarians were present. A gold plated Buddha statue donated by the Sri Lanka-Korea Friendship Foundation for World Peace was presented to the President. The special observance day program of ITN's "Savanak Ras" was broadcast from the great royal Situl Pawwa Raja monastery today. Various religious program were organized under the patronage of Ven. Mataramba Hemaratana Thera. Meanwhile, the Sasanaloka ["Dharma-in-this-world"] program organized by Lakhanda Radio was held at Situl Pawwa monastery. Dharma books were offered to novices, while lay devotees were given white cloth and Buddha statues. ITN staff also participated in the religious program. (Source)

Monday, January 18, 2010

Buddha was here, says Sri Lankan scholar

Darshana Chaturvedi (TNN, Jan. 16, 2010)

VADODARA, India - While MS University's Department of Archaeology and Ancient History may have grabbed global attention with its possession of the Buddha's relics, few might know that in his lifetime Lord Buddha visited Gujarat [West India, below Pakistan, as seen on map].

This startling piece of information was revealed by Professor Anura Manatunga from Sri Lanka, who presented his paper "Buddhism in Gujarat: Some supplementary evidences from Sri Lanka."

"There are two references in Sri Lankan sources about Lord Buddha's visit to the state during his lifetime. As per first reference in Mahavamsa, which is a revered chronicle of Sri Lanka, Buddha visited Sunnapparantaka Janapad (part of Gujarat) along with 500 monks on the invitation of great monk Sunnapparantaka in his ninth year after he became Buddha. It is further stated that he preached Buddha dharma at Chandanshala of Muhalu Ashram, also in Gujarat," said Manatunga, who is the director of Centre for Asian Studies in University of Kelaniya.

He added, "The text adds that from Sunnapparantaka, he left for Narmada River on an invitation of a Nag King of Narmada and set up sacred footprints of Buddha at the mouth of Narmada River. The second source says that public society of traders of Sunnapparantaka Janapad is one of the 24 societies taught by the Buddha during his lifetime. One can infer that these places refer to Gujarat as apparantaka' which means west-end of the country. In [the] Indian context, it only points towards the state," added Manatunga.

Quoting more evidence from the Mahavamsa, Manatunga explains that Sri Lanka was colonized by Prince Vijaya along with 700 followers hailing from Lata Country, which was a part of Gujarat. "It is mentioned that Prince Vijaya came to Sri Lanka on the same day when Buddha died. His successor, King S.L. Panduvasadeva, too, came from Lata. It can be inferred that Sri Lanka has a strong Gujarat connection and influence," said Prof. Manatunga.

The Sri Lankan researcher also said that Buddhism also finds a strong presence in the state with ancient Sri Lankan inscriptions revealing that a chief named Mala had gone from Bharuch to Sri Lanka, where he constructed and donated a cave to Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka.

"There is another inscription from Junagadh that refers to a construction of two-cell cave by two Sri Lankan brothers Buddha Mitra and Buddha Rakshita. They were described as sons of horse traders who lived in Bharuch having migrated from Sri Lanka," he said. "Sources also enumerate instances of presence of many viharas [or Buddhist] monasteries in Saurashtra Janapad, which was described as a wealthiest of all Janapad's of the country," said Manatunga. More>>
  • NOTE an ancient "Janapad" was the equivalent of a "country" today, literally the area claimed/controlled by a clan or tribe.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Buddhism Reaches Burma


Burma: fierce Naga warrior, famed even in the time of the Buddha (allmyanmar.com)

Enlightened Missionaries originally spread Buddhism
Soon after his Great Enlightenment, the Buddha sent out 60 enlightened disciples. They had the mandate to spread the good news (of liberation) to the world, with no two going in the same direction. They made it to Alexandria, Greece, Afghanistan, Persia, and the teaching of these Great Elders (Maha Theras) eventually made it to the Middle East (by way of Saint Issa), right to the religious powder keg known as Jerusalem. The teachings traveled throughout Asia, by way of the Silk Route which had as much to do with commerce as culture.

Eventually, because Chinese missionaries were blown far off course, Buddhism made it to the pre-European-contact New World. It revolutionized cultures wherever it went, often meeting heavily Animistic indigenous views and melding with them. For example, pre-Buddhist Tibet practiced Bon, Japan practiced Shinto, and China was steeped in ancestor worship.

Closer to home (the Buddha after all lived in Northern India, or what was known as the "Middle Country" portion of Jambudvipa, lit. "the Rose Apple Island," the ancient name of the Indian subcontinent), missionaries arrived in Burma. However, as history records, it was not until a few hundred years later -- during the reign of an empire -- that a Buddhist Council made a concerted effort to establish the teachings in Myanmar (which, of course, bore different borders and different clan and tribal allegiances than the Naga, Karen, Mon, majority Burman, and others seen today).

Burmese tribesmen, young girls from the mountainous region (allmyanmar.com)

Buddhism in Myanmar: A Short History
Roger Bischoff (Access to Insight)

Missionaries of the Third Buddhist Council
The Third Buddhist Council was held during the reign of Emperor Asoka in the year 232 BCE in order to purify the monastic order (Sangha), to reassert orthodox teaching, and to refute heresy. But the work of the Council did not stop there.


18th century Burman replete with Indochinese influences (allmyanmar.com)

With the support of Emperor Asoka, experienced teachers were sent to border regions in order to spread the teachings of the Buddha. This dispersal of missionaries is recorded in the Mahavamsa, a Sri Lankan chronicle on the history of Buddhism:

When the Thera ("Elder") Moggaliputta, the illuminator of the religion of the Conqueror, had brought the (third) council to an end and when, looking into the future, he had beheld the founding of the religion in adjacent countries, then in the month of Katthika he sent forth theras, one here and one there.

The thera Majjhantika he sent to Kasmira and Gandhara [Kashmir and Afghanistan], the thera Mahadeva he sent to Mahisamandala [the region girding the Himalayas]. To Vanavasa he sent the thera named Rakkhita, and to Aparantaka the Yona named Dhammarakkhita; to Maharattha he sent the thera named Mahadhammarakkhita, but the thera Maharakkhita he sent into the country of the Yona. He sent the thera Majjhima to the Himalaya country and together with the thera Uttara, the thera Sona of wondrous might went to Suvannabhumi...12

According to the Sasanavamsa [the "great history of the dispensation"], the above mentioned regions are the following: Kasmira and Gandhara is the right bank of the Indus river south of Kabul; Mahisamandala is Andhra; Vanavasa is the region around Prome; Aparantaka is west of the upper Irrawaddy; Maharattha is Thailand; Yona, the country of the Shan tribes; and Suvannabhumi is Thaton (Burma). The Sasanavamsa mentions five places in Southeast Asia where Asoka's missionaries taught the Buddha's doctrine, and through their teaching many gained insight and took refuge in the Triple Gem [Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha].

There are two interesting features mentioned in the text. First, in order to ordain nuns (bhikkhunis), other bhikkhunis had to be present, and secondly, the Brahmajala Sutra ["The All-Embracing Net of Views Discourse"] was preached in Thaton.

The Sasanavamsa goes on to describe sixty-thousand women ordaining in Aparanta. It states that women could not have been ordained without the presence of bhikkhunis, as in Sri Lanka where women could only be ordained after Ven. Mahinda's sister Sanghamitta had followed her brother there. In this case, it is surmised that bhikkhunis must have followed Dhammarakkhita to Aparanta at a later stage.

The Brahmajala Sutra, which the arhats ["enlightened"] Sona and Uttara preached in Thaton, deals in detail with the different schools of philosophical and religious thought prevalent in India at the time of the Buddha. The fact that Sona and Uttara chose this discourse to convert the inhabitants of Suvannabhumi indicates that they were facing a well-informed public, familiar with the views of Brahmanism [early brahmin caste leaning Hinduism] that were refuted by the Buddha in this discourse. There can be no doubt that only Indian colonizers, not the Mon people of Burma, would have been able to follow an analysis of Indian philosophy as profound as the Brahmajala Sutra.

Friday, August 8, 2008

The Great Chronicle


Mahavamsa.org (click banner)
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The Mahavamsa
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The Mahavamsa, otherwise known as the “Great Chronicle,” is the single most important work of Sri Lankan origin (written in the Pali language). It describes the life and times of the people who forged the island nation, from the coming of Vijaya in 543 BCE to the reign of King Mahasena (334–361) (6th cent. BC to 4th cent. AD). A companion volume, the Culavamsa (“Lesser Chronicle”), covers the period from the 4th cent. to the British takeover in 1815.

The Mahavamsa is comprised of three parts, all written at different times in Sri Lankan history. The combined work, sometimes collectively referred to as the “Mahavamsa” provides an unbroken historical record of over two millennia and is considered the world’s longest continuous history. Buddhist monks of the Mahavihara maintained this Sri Lankan historical record starting from 3rd cent. B.C., somewhat similar to a modern-day diary. These records were combined and compiled into a single document in the 5th cent. CE by the great Buddhst elder Mahanama.

Earlier documents known as the “Dipavamsa” were also handed down and are much simpler with less information than the Mahavamsa, probably compiled relying on a text also used by Mahanama.

Overall, the Great Chronicle has over 200,000 words and about 960 pages. The first part (Chapters 1-37) is the Mahavamsa, the second part (Chapters 38-79) the Culavamsa Part 1, and the third and final part (Chapters 80-101) the Culavamsa Part 2.
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The Lankavatara and Mahavamsa
Text by Dharma.org.ru

According to the same Sri Lanka (an ancient map of which is pictured at left, showing the island at the southern tip of India)record, in this land of Theravada practitioners, another Buddhist center named Abhayagiri Monastery (Vihara) was built by King Vattagamini Abhaya (B.C. 29-17), at the site of a Jain temple, in the town of Anuradhapura (XIX).
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The Dipavamsa closes its record of the royal lineage of Sri Lanka with the description of how King Mahasena (A.D. 334-361) died under the influence of "the shameless, evil monks" of this Abhayagiri Monastery and had to receive consequences for a lifetime of evil conduct, and it warns readers to avoid such evil people as beings who are like snakes (XXII).

The Dipavamsa is considered to have been compiled between A.D. 361, the year King Mahasena died, and 429, the year Buddhaghosa [the most famous commentator who compiled perhaps the most famous meditation instruction manual, The Path of Purification], who had come from India to live near the Mahavihara [the "Great Monastery," pictured at left] in Anuradhapura, began writing a commentary on the disciplinary rules (Samanta-pasadika).

The other history book on Sri Lanka, the Mahavamsa, is said to have been compiled around the middle or end of the 5th cent. with the purpose of refining and supplementing the Dipavamsa.

According to this newer record, Mahayana studies and practice at Abhayagiri Monastery were conducted in a critical manner against the Theravada way of thinking represented by the practitioners at the Mahavihara. The latter hated the former so much that they tried removing the Mahayanists by means of political power. In the Mahavamsa "Mahayana" was called "Vetulyavada" (Vaipulya or Vitanda):

(1) King Voharikatissa (A.D. 269-291): "Suppressing the Vetulya-doctrine, and keeping heretics in check by his minister Kapila, he made the true doctrine to shine forth in glory" (XXXVI. 41).

(2) King Gothabhaya (Meghavannabhaya, A.D. 309-322): "He seized bhikkhus dwelling in Abhayagiri Monastery, 60 in number, who had turned to the Vetulya-doctrine [Mahayana Buddhism] and were like a thorn in the doctrine of the Buddha, and when he had excommunicated them, he banished them to the further coast" (XXXVI. 111,112).

In A.D. 410-411, Faxian, a Chinese monk, who had left China in 399 to seek Vinaya texts [books explaining the disciplinary rules and their origins], and who had made long travels by land, stayed in Sri Lanka for two years. He then returned by sea with Buddhist texts on board a ship, and back home wrote down a detailed record of the travels for himself (Taisho Tripitaka Vol. 51, No. 2085). According to this record, five thousand monks in Anuradhapura were abiding in the Abhayagiri Monastery, and for ninety days annually the Buddha's teeth were carried from the Temple of the Tooth to the Abhayagiri Monastery to receive people's offerings. In the Mahavihara Temple Complex three-thousand monks were abiding.

The English translator (dharma.org.ru) surmises that the Lankavatara Sutra was compiled at Abhayagiri Monastery some time between A.D. 411 (when Faxian left Lanka for home) and 435 (when Gunabhadra reached China, possibly bringing the Sanskrit text from Sri Lanka).... Read more
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Sources: Buddhistravel.com (Theravada), Mahavamsa.org (photos), Dharma.org.ru