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UpavÄṇa


1. UpavÄṇa.- A thera. He belonged to a very rich brahmin family of SÄvatthi, and having seen the Buddha’s majesty at the dedication of Jetavana, he entered the Order and became an Arahant with sixfold higher knowledge (abhiññÄ). For some time, before Ä€nanda was appointed as the Buddha’s personal attendant (upaá¹­á¹­hÄka), UpavÄṇa waited on the Buddha. Once when the Buddha was attacked by cramp, UpavÄṇa, with the help of his lay-friend Devahita, obtained hot water and suitable medicines, with which the ailment was healed; the Buddha, thereupon, expressed his gratitude. ThagA.i.308ff; this ailment does not seem to be mentioned in the Milindapañha 134f. where several others are given. This incident is given at greater length in S.i.174f; see also DhA.iv.232f.

When the Buddha lay on his death-bed at KusinÄra, UpavÄṇa was by his side fanning him; the Buddha, seeing that he obstructed the vision of the devas who had come to pay their last homage to the Teacher, asked UpavÄṇa to move away (D.ii.138f).

Two occasions are mentioned on which UpavÄṇa consulted the Buddha on matters of doctrine, once regarding the arising of suffering (S.ii.41-2) and once on the immediate and practical use of the Dhamma (sandiá¹­á¹­hikadhamma) (S.iv.41). There is also recorded a visit of UpavÄṇa to SÄriputta when they were both staying in the GhositÄrÄma at KosambÄ«. SÄriputta asks him about the factors of enlightenment as being conducive to a happy life and UpavÄṇa explains (S.v.76). On another occasion UpavÄṇa is the enquirer, and he asks SÄriputta about the “end-maker†(antakara); SÄriputta explains that the “end-maker†is the one who knows and sees things as they really are (A.ii.163).

When an unpleasant interview took place between SÄriputta and LÄludÄyÄ« (q.v.) and no one was found to support SÄriputta, the matter is reported to the Buddha, who declares that Ä€nanda should have taken SÄriputta’s side. Soon afterwards Ä€nanda seeks UpavÄṇa and tells him that he was too timid to interfere, and if the Buddha referred to the matter again, would UpavÄṇa undertake to answer? In the evening the Buddha engages UpavÄṇa in conversation and asks him to explain the five qualities that make a monk esteemed and loved by his colleagues. At the end of the discourse the Buddha applauds UpavÄṇa (A.iii.195f).

In Padumuttara’s time UpavÄṇa had been a poor man. Seeing people making great offerings at the Buddha’s thÅ«pa, he was much touched, and having washed his upper garment, he hung it as a flag over the thÅ«pa. A yakkha named Abhisammataka, who was the guardian of the cetiya, took the flag three times round the cetiya, he himself remaining invisible.

A monk whom the man consulted after this miracle foretold that for thirty thousand world-cycles he would be in the deva-worlds and that he would be deva-king eighty times. One thousand times he was Cakkavatti. In his last life his wealth was eighty crores. When he was Cakkavatti, his banner was held aloft, three leagues in height. Ap.i.70ff.


2. UpavÄṇa.- Son of AnomadassÄ« Buddha. Bu.viii.19.

Dictionary of PÄli Proper Names • G.P. Malalasekera

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