Koá¹isanthÄra
In the JÄtakas mention is made (e.g., J.iii.18; 375, 397; J.iv.113) of the Buddha when he wished to address the monks of Jetavana, asking Ä€nanda to summon them to the Koá¹isanthÄra and ordering that a seat be prepared for him at the entrance to the Gandhakuá¹i.
Koá¹isanthÄra was probably the name given to that part of the Jetavana grounds just outside the Buddha’s own apartments. It may have been so called in reference to the fact that AnÄthapiṇá¸ika bought the land by spreading on it a crore (koá¹i) of gold coins (kahÄpaṇa) “kahÄpana-koá¹i-santhÄrena†(J.i.94). Or the name may have been restricted to the part actually covered by the pieces of money, for we are told (Vin.ii.159) that the money was not sufficient to cover the whole of the ground.
There were buildings in the Koá¹isanthÄra, the monks living in these buildings being referred to as “Antokoá¹isanthÄre vasantÄ.†(e.g., J.iv.113)
Koá¹isanthÄra is generally translated as The Golden Pavement, (e.g., JÄt. Trs.iii.12; iv.71) which seems to be a wrong rendering.
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