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abb

SÄvatthi


The capital town of Kosala in India and one of the six great Indian cities during the lifetime of the Buddha (D.ii.147). It was six leagues from SÄketa (Vin.i.253; seven according to others, DhA.i.387), forty five leagues north west of RÄjagaha (SA.i.243), thirty leagues from Saá¹…kassa (J.iv.265), one hundred and forty-seven from TakkasilÄ (MA.ii.987), one hundred and twenty from SuppÄraka (DhA.ii.213), and was on the banks of the AciravatÄ« (Vin.i.191, 293). It was thirty leagues from ĀḷavÄ« (SNA.i.220), thirty from MacchÄ«kÄsanda (DhA.ii.79), one hundred and twenty from Kukkuá¹­avatÄ« (DhA.ii.118), and the same distance from Uggapura (DhA.iii.469) and from Kuraraghara (DhA.iv.106). The road from RÄjagaha to SÄvatthi passed through VesÄli (Vin.ii.159f), and the ParÄyanavagga (SN.vss.1011 13) gives the resting places between the two cities â€” SetavyÄ, Kapilavatthu, KusinÄrÄ, PÄvÄ and Bhoganagara. Further on, there was a road running southwards from SÄvatthi through SÄketa to KosambÄ«. One gÄvuta from the city was the Andhavana (q.v.) Between SÄketa and SÄvatthi was Toranavatthu (S.iv.374).

The city was called SÄvatthi because the sage Savattha lived there. Another tradition says there was a road-side inn there, and people meeting there asked each other what they had   “Kiṃ bhandaṃ atthi?†“Sabbaṃ atthi“ — and the name of the city was based on the reply (SNA.i.300; PSA. 367).

The Buddha passed the greater part of his monastic life in SÄvatthi. His first visit there was at the invitation of AnÄthapiṇá¸ika. It is said (DhA.i.4) that he spent twenty five rainy seasons in the city — nineteen of them in Jetavana and six in the PubbÄrÄma. SÄvatthi also contained the monastery of RÄjakÄrÄma (q.v.), built by Pasenadi, opposite Jetavana. Outside the city gate of SÄvatthi was a fisherman’s village of five hundred families (DhA.iv.40).

Savatthi is the scene of each Buddha’s Yamaka pÄtihÄriya (DhA.iii.205; cf. Mtu.iii.115; J.i.88); Gotama Buddha performed this miracle under the Gandamba (q.v.)

The chief patrons of the Buddha in SÄvatthi were AnÄthapindika, VisÄkhÄ, SuppavÄsÄ and Pasenadi (DhA.i.330). When Bandhula (q.v.) left VesÄli he came to live in SÄvatthi.

Buddhaghosa says (Sp.iii.614) that, in the Buddha’s day, there were fifty seven thousand families in SÄvatthi, and that it was the chief city in the country of KÄsi Kosala, which was three hundred leagues in extent and had eighty thousand villages. The population of SÄvatthi was eighteen crores (SNA.i.371).

SÄvatthi is identified with SÄhet MÄhet on the banks of the Rapti (Cunningham, AGI. 469).

Hiouen Thsang found the old city in ruins, but records the sites of various buildings (Beal, op. cit., ii.1 13).

Woodward states (KS.v.xviii ) that, of the four NikÄyas, 871 suttas are said to have been taught in SÄvatthi; 844 of which are in Jetavana, 23 in the PubbÄrÄma, and 4 in the suburbs. These suttas are made up of 6 in the Digha, 75 in the Majjhima, 736 in the Samyutta, and 54 in the Anguttara. Mrs. Rhys Davids conjectures (M.iv., Introd., p.vi) from this that either the Buddha “mainly resided there or else SÄvatthi was the earliest emporium (library?) for the collection and preservation (however this was done) of the talks.†The first alternative is the more likely, as the Commentaries state that the Buddha spent twenty five rainy seasons in SÄvatthi (see earlier), this leaving only twenty to be spent elsewhere. The Buddhavamsa Commentary (BuA. p.3) gives a list of these places showing that the second, third, fourth, seventeenth and twentieth were spent in RÄjagaha, the thirteenth, eighteenth and nineteenth in CÄliyapabbata, and the rest in different places.


Dictionary of PÄli Proper Names • G.P. Malalasekera

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