


Pali Proper Names — K
- Kebukā
- Kehāla.-See Kohāla.
- Kehella.-A village in Ceylon, the
revenue from which Aggabodhi III. gave to the padhānaghara called Mahallarāja.
Cv.xliv.120.
- Keheta.-A village in Ceylon, given by
Jetthatissa III. for the maintenance of the Gangāmāti-vihāra. Cv.xliv.99.
- Keka.-A kingdom in Mahimsakarattha.
Ajjuna Sahassabāhu once ruled there. v.l. Kekaka (J.v.145).
- Kekaka.-A city, regarded in ancient
times as one of the three chief cities of Jambudīpa, the others being
Uttarapañcāla and
Indapatta. J.ii.213.
- Kekakā.-The people of Kekaka. J.ii.214;
v.267, 273; vi.280, 281.
- Kekarājā.-The king of Kekaka. J.vi.280,
281.
- Kekaya.-Another name for Keka and Kekaka.
J.ii.214.
- Kekkhārupupphiya.-See Kakkāru.
- Kelāsa
- Kelavāhā.-See Telavāhā.
- Kelisīla Jātaka (No.202)
- Kelivāta.-A district or village in
Ceylon. Aggabodhi I. built there the Sumanapabbata-vihāra. Cv.xlii.19.
- Keliya-tissa.-See Ariyagāla-tissa.
- Keniya (v.l. Kenniya)
- Keralā
- Kerala.-A country in South India, along
the Malabar coast. See Keralā.
- Keralasīhamuttara.-A Damila chief, an
ally of Kulasekhara (Cv.lxxvi.141). He later formed a friendship with Lankāpura.
Cv.lxxvii.7.
- Kesa.-See Kesi.
- Kesadhātu
- Kesadhātuvamsa
- Kesakambala Sutta
- Kesakambala.-See Ajita Kesakambala.
- Kesakārī
- Kesaputta.-A township of the Kosalans
and the residence of the Kālāmas. The Buddha once stayed there, on which
occasion he preached the Kesaputtiya Sutta. A.i.188.
- Kesaputtiya Sutta
- Kesaputtiyā.-The people of Kesaputta —
the Kālāmas (A.i.188). It is suggested that they may be identical with the
Kesins of the Satapatha Brāhman. Law: Geog. p.30 n.; PHAI.118.
- Kesārāma.-A park in the city of Sīlavatī.
The Buddha Dhammadassī died there. Bu.xvi.25; BuA.185.
- Kesarapupphiya Thera.-An arahant.
Ninety-one kappas ago he was a vijjādhara in Himavā, and having seen the Buddha
Vessabhū, gave him three kesara-flowers. Ap.i.187.
- Kesava
- Kesava Jātaka (No.346)
- Kesi (Vagga/Sutta)
- Kesī.-See Kesinī below.
- Kesinī 1.-One of the wives of Ekarāja.
J.vi.134.
- Kesinī 2.-Mother of Buddhaghosa (Buddhaghosuppatti,
p.38). The Sāsanavamsa (p.29) calls her Kesī.
- Ketakapupphiya Thera.-An arahant.
Ninety-one kappas ago he saw the Buddha Vipassī (?) on the banks of the Vinatā
and gave him a ketaka-flower (Ap.ii.449f). His stanzas are given in the
Theragāthā Commentary under two names: Abhaya and Kappatakura.
- Ketakavana.-A forest near Nalakapāna in
Kosala. There the Buddha preached the Nalapāna Jātaka. J.i.170.
- Ketumā.-A Pacceka Buddha, mentioned in a
list of their names. M.iii.70; ApA.i.107.
- Ketumatī
- Ketumbarāga.-The name of a Pacceka
Buddha (M.iii.70; Ap.i.107).
- Kevatta (v.l. Kevaddha)
- Kevatta (v.l. Kevaddha) Sutta
- Kevattadvāra.-One of the gates of
Benares. The village near it bore the same name and was the residence of Lakhumā.
VvA.97f.
- Kevattagambhīra.-A village in Rohana,
given by Dappula to the Nāga-vihāra. Cv.xlv.58.
- Kevatta-Nanda.-One of the Nava-Nandā.
- Khadira Sutta.-It is just as impossible
to destroy dukkha without realising the Four Noble Truths as it is to make a
leaf-basket of acacia leaves, etc., or to fetch water in such a basket, or to
use the leaves for a fan. S.v.438.
- Khadirangani.-A village in Ceylon. Kitti
(afterwards Vijayabāhu I.) once occupied a stronghold in the village and fought
a successful battle near by. Cv.lvii.72; lviii.36.
- Khadirangāra Jātaka (No.40)
- Khadirāvali Vihāra.-A monastery in
Rohana. Dappula I, built it and offered it to the presiding deity of the place
(probably Skanda). Cv.xlv.55; see also Cv. Trs.i.94, n.3.
- Khadiravaniya.-The name of the
Bodhisatta when he was once born as a bird in a khadira-wood. See the
Kandagalaka Jātaka. J.ii.162f.
- Khadiravaniya-Revata.-See Revata.
- Khaggavisāna Sutta
- Khajjakadāyaka Thera.-An arahant.
Ninety-two kappas ago he gave a ripe panasa-fruit, with a coconut, to the Buddha
Tissa; and thirteen kappas ago he was a king named Indasoma (Ap.i.182). He is
probably identical with Setuccha Thera. ThagA.i.206f.
- Khajjanīya Sutta
- Khajjanīya Vagga.-The eighth chapter of
the Khandha Samyutta of the Samyutta Nikāya. S.iii.81-105.
- Khajjanīya-pariyāya.-See Khajjanīya Sutta.
- Khajjopanaka Jātaka (No.364).-See
Khajjopanaka-Pañha.
- Khajjopanaka-Pañha
- Khajjotanadī.-A river in Ceylon,
tributary of the Mahāvāluka-nadī. Over it Devappatirāja built a bridge of thirty
cubits. Cv.lxxxvi.22; see also Cv. Trs.ii.173, n.3.
- Khajjūrakavaddhamāna.-A tank in Ceylon.
Cv.lxvii.39.
- Khalātiya Petavatthu
- Khallātanāga
- Khaluggata.-See Baluggata.
- Khalunka Sutta 1.-The eight defects of a
horse and the corresponding eight defects of a man. A.iv.190f.
- Khalunka Sutta 2.-Three groups of three
classes of horses and the corresponding three classes of men. A.iv.397f.
- Khalupaccha Sutta.-On the five kinds of
monks found among those who refuse food offered them after the normal time (“Khalupacchā-bhattikā”).
A.iii.220.
- Khamā Sutta 1.-The four modes of
progress (patipadā); that which is impatient, that which is patient, that which
tames, and that which calms. A.ii.152f.
- Khamā Sutta 2.-Similar to the above, but
the practice of the patipadā is differently illustrated. A.ii.153f.
- Khambhakata Vagga.-The Third Section of
the Sekhiyā of the Vinaya Pitaka. Vin.iv.188-91.
- Khanda
- Khandacela
- Khandadeva
- Khandadeviyāputta
- Khandahāla Jātaka (No.542)
- Khandahāla.-A brahmin; a former birth of
Devadatta. See the Khandahāla Jātaka.
- Khandakavitthika.-A village in Ceylon.
The birthplace of Sūranimila (Mhv.xxiii.19).
- Khandaphulliya Thera
- Khandarāja.-A monastery in Ceylon, built
by Upatissa II. Cv.xxxvii.186.
- Khandasīmā.-A sacred space in
Pulatthipura included in the sīmā marked out for the Sangha by Parakkamabāhu I.
Cv.lxxviii.68; see also Cv. Trs.ii. 110, n.5.
- Khandasumana Thera
- Khandavagga.-A district in Rohana. The
forces of the enemies of Parakkamabāhu I, once encamped there. Cv.1xxv.119-23.
- Khandha Paritta/Vagga/Samyutta
- Khandha Sutta
- Khandhā Sutta 1.-The five khandhas and
the five upādānakkhandhas. S.iii.47.
- Khandhā Sutta 2.-It is for the full
comprehension of the five upādānakkhandhas that the Noble Eightfold Path should
be followed. S.v.60.
- Khandhaka Thūpa.-A cetiya (probably in
the Cetiyapabbata). King Lañjaka Tissa caused a mantling of stone to be made for
it. Mhv.xxxiii.25. v.l. Katthaka, Kanthaka Thūpa, Kantaka Thūpa. See also
Katthaka.
-
Khandhakā
- Khandhapura.-The Pāli name for Myein
Zaing in Burma (Bode, op. cit., 40).
- Khandhāvara.-The family name of
Ayasmanta (Cv.lxxx.37). They were worshippers of the god Skanda, and were an
offshoot of the Moriyavamsa. According to the colophon of the Sinhalese poem,
Sālalihinisandesa.
- Khandhavatta Jātaka (No.203)
- Khandhena Sutta
- Khandigāma.-A village in Ceylon. It
contained a narrow pass where a battle took place between Gajabāhu and Lankāpura,
in which the former was defeated. Later, the Adhikārin Nātha suffered defeat in
the same place. Cv.lxx.216-81, 298; see also Cv. Trs.i.305, n.6.
- Khañjadeva
- Khanti Sutta.-See Vepacitti Sutta.
- Khantikakhipa.-See Nāgita (2).
- Khantivādī Jātaka (No.313)
- Khantivādī.-The title of the ascetic of
the Khantivādī Jātaka.
- Khantivanna Jātaka (No.225)
- Khānu 1.-A Tamil general whom Dutthagāmani conquered in his campaign. His stronghold was at Khānugāma.
Mhv.xxv.14.
- Khānu 2.-A tank, probably at Khānugāma,
built by Mahāsena. Mhv.xxxvii.47.
- Khānu Kondañña
- Khānumata.-A brahmin village of Magadha,
presented to Kūtadanta by Bimbisāra. The Buddha once stayed there at the
Ambalatthika pleasance, and there he preached the
Kūtadanta Sutta. D.i.127.
- Khara
- Kharadāthika
- Kharādiya Jātaka (No.15)
- Kharādiyā.-See the Kharādiya Jātaka.
- Kharaputta Jātaka (No.386)
- Kharassara Jātaka (No.79)
- Khārodakā.-A river in Avīci, flowing
alongside the Asipattavana. M.iii.185; SNA.ii.479.
- Khata Sutta
- Khattiya Sutta
- Khattiyānī or Velāmikā.-Chief of the
eighty-four thousand women who waited on the Bodhisatta when he was once a
mighty king Mahāsudassana of Kusāvatī. S.iii.146; but see D.ii.188.
- Khaya Sutta
- Khema
- Khemā
- Khema Sutta
- Khema Vagga.-The sixth chapter of the Navaka Nipāta of the Anguttara Nikāya. A.iv.455f.
- Khemābhirata.-A Pacceka Buddha mentioned
in a nominal list (M.iii.70).
- Khemaka
- Khemankara
- Khemappakarana
- Khemārāma.-A locality in Ceylon. Here
Dutthagāmani, having vanquished eleven Damila chiefs, distributed among his
troops the booty rescued from them — hence the name (Mhv.xxv.10; MT.474).
- Khemātherī Sutta.-Records the story of
the visit of Pasenadi to Khemā (S.iv.374ff). See Khemā (1).
- Khemavatī
- Khemī.-A pond, probably identical with
Khema (8) (J.v.374).
- Khemiyā.-A class of gods, present at the
preaching of the Mahā Samaya Sutta (D.ii.261).
- Khemiyambavana.-A mango grove near
Benares. Udena once stayed there and preached the
Ghotamukha Sutta. M.ii.157.
- Khetta Sutta 1.-The eight qualities of a
bad field in which to sow grain and the corresponding qualities of a good field.
Similarly with the recipients of gifts. A.iv.237f.
- Khetta Sutta 2.-Few abstain from
accepting fields; many do not. S.v.473.
- Khettūpama-peta Vatthu.-The first story
of the Peta Vatthu. Pv.i.1.
- Khiddāpadosikā
- Khila Sutta
- Khīlā Sutta.-The three mental
obstructions — lust, hatred, and illusion — to the comprehension of the Noble
Eightfold Path (S.v.57).
- Khira Sutta.-Preached at Sāvatthi.
Incalculable is the beginning of samsāra. The milk drunk by a being during his
wanderings in samsāra is more in quantity than the water of the four seas.
S.ii.180.
- Khīrabhatta-tissa.- See Ariyagāla-tissa.
- Khīragāma
- Khīrarukkha Sutta.-Where lust, malice,
and infatuation exist in a man, even trifling objects, cognisable by the senses,
find their way into the mind, just as, in a sap-tree, sap flows out wherever man
cuts it with an axe (S.iv.159f).
- Khīravāpikagāma.-A village in Ceylon,
near the district of Ambavana (Cv.lxvi.85).
- Khitaka Thera
- Kholakkhiya.-An image of the Buddha in
Ceylon. King Udaya I. gave for its maintenance the village of Mahāmaga.
Cv.xlix.14.
- Khomadāyaka Thera.-An arahant.
Ninety-one kappas ago he was a merchant in Bandhumatī and, having seen Vipassī
Buddha in the street, gave him a linen cloth (khoma). Twenty-seven kappas ago he
was a king named Sindhavasandana. Ap.i.80f.
- Khomadussa
- Khomadussa Sutta
- Khomadussaka.-An inhabitant of
Khomadussa. S.i.184.
- Khudda-Aggabodhi.-The name given to
Aggabodhi II (Cv.xlii.40; xliv.2). He was also called Khuddarājā (Cv.xliv.138).
See Aggabodhi (3).
- Khuddaka Nikāya
- Khuddaka Tissa (Khudda Tissa)
- Khuddakā.-Name of a tribe. Ap.ii.359.
- Khuddaka.-The name given to the section
on Pācittiya which occurs in the Sutta Vibhanga of the Vinaya Pitaka.
Vin.iv.174, 345.
- Khuddakañcakunda.-A Damila chief,
generally referred to as Culla-kañcakunda. Cv.lxxvi.170.
- Khuddakapātha
- Khuddakavatthu-Khandhaka.-The fifth
chapter of the Culla Vagga of the Vinaya Pitaka. Vin.ii.105-43.
- Khuddapārinda.-A Tamil usurper. He was
the brother of Parinda who had usurped Dhātusena’s throne. He reigned for
sixteen years (between 430 and 460 A.C.). Cv.xxxviii.30f.
- Khuddarājā.-See Khudda-Aggabodhi above.
- Khuddarūpī.-See Maddarūpī.
- Khuddasikkhā
- Khuddavalikagāma.-A harbour in North
Ceylon. Cv.lxxxviii.23.
- Khujjanāga.-Son of Kanittha-Tissa. He
was king of Ceylon (246-248 A.C.). He was slain by his brother Kuñcanāga.
Mhv.xxxvi.18f.
- Khujjasobhita Thera
- Khujjuttarā
- Khulū.-Probably a wrong reading for
Bhumū. D.iii.6.
- Khuradhāra.-A Niraya. Those guilty of
abortion are born there. J.v.269, 274f.
- Khuramāla, Khuramālī.-A sea. Once,
merchants travelling from Bhārukaccha lost their way in it and were rescued by
Suppāraka. In the sea were fishes with bodies like men and sharp razor-like
snouts. J.iv.139.
- Khurappa Jātaka (No.265)