KoliyÄ
One of the republican clans in the time of the Buddha. The KoliyÄ owned two chief settlements — one at RÄmagÄma and the other at Devadaha. The Commentaries (DA.i.260f; SNA.i.356f; A.ii.558; ThagA.i.546; also Ap.i.94) contain accounts of the origin of the Koliyas. We are told that a king of Benares, named RÄma (the Mtu.i.353 calls him Kola and explains from this the name of the Koliyas), suffered from leprosy, and being detested by the women of the court, he left the kingdom to his eldest son and retired into the forest. There, living on woodland leaves and fruits, he soon recovered, and, while wandering about, came across PiyÄ, the eldest of the five daughters of OkkÄka, she herself being afflicted with leprosy. RÄma, having cured her, married her, and they begot thirty-two sons. With the help of the king of Benares, they built a town in the forest, removing a big kola-tree in doing so. The city thereupon came to be called Kolanagara, and because the site was discovered on a tiger-track (vyagghapatha) it was also called VyagghapajjÄ. The descendants of the king were known as KoliyÄ.
According to the KunÄlÄ JÄtaka (J.v.413), when the SÄkyans wished to abuse the Koliyans, they said that the Koliyans had once “lived like animals in a Kola-tree,†as their name signified. The territories of the SÄkiyans and the Koliyans were adjacent, separated by the river RohinÄ«. The khattiyas of both tribes intermarried, and both claimed relationship with the Buddha. (It is said that once the Koliyan youths carried away many SÄkiyan maidens while they were bathing, but the SÄkiyans, regarding the Koliyans as relatives, took no action; DA.i.262). A quarrel once arose between the two tribes regarding the right to the waters of the Rohiṇī, which irrigated the land on both sides, and a bloody feud was averted only by the intervention of the Buddha. In gratitude, each clan dedicated some of its young men to the membership of the Order, and during the Buddha’s stay in the neighbourhood, he lived alternately in Kapilavatthu and in Koliyanagara. (For details of this quarrel and its consequences see J.v.412ff; DA.ii.672ff; DhA.iii.254ff).
Attached probably to the Koliyan central authorities, was a special body of officials, presumably police, who wore a distinguishing headdress with a drooping crest (LambacūḷakÄbhatÄ). They bore a bad reputation for extortion and violence (S.iv.341).
Besides the places already mentioned, several other townships of the Koliyans, visited by the Buddha or by his disciples, are mentioned in literature — e.g.,
- Uttara, the residence of the headman PÄtaliya (S.iv.340);
- Sajjanela, residence of SuppavÄsÄ (A.ii.62);
- SÄpÅ«ga, where Ä€nanda once stayed (A.ii.194);
- Kakkarapatta, where lived DÄ«ghajÄnu (A.iv.281); and
- Haliddavasana, residence of the ascetics Punna Koliyaputta and Seniya (M.i.387; see also S.v.115).
Nisabha (ThagA.i.318), Kakudha (SA.i.89) (attendant of MoggallÄna), and KankhÄ-Revata (Ap.ii.491) (and perhaps Sona Kolivisa, q.v.), were also Koliyans.
After the Buddha’s death the Koliyans of RÄmagÄma claimed and obtained one-eighth of the Buddha’s relics, over which they erected a thÅ«pa (D.ii.167; Mhv.xxi.18, 22ff). See also s.v. SuppavÄsÄ.
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