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A brahmin ascetic who went from Sāvatthi to
Dakkhināpatha and lived on the banks of
the Godhāvarī in a hermitage which lay half
in the territory of Assaka and half in that of
Alaka.
He received the revenue of a village near by and held a great sacrifice,
spending all he possessed. Then to him came a brahmin of terrible mien,
demanding five hundred pieces.
(He was a brahmin of Dunnivittha. His
wife was a descendant of the family of Jūjaka
and was constantly nagging at him. It was she who sent him to Bāvarī,
AA.i.183).
When Bāvari told him of his poverty, the brahmin cursed him saying that his
head would split in seven pieces. Bāvarī was greatly distressed, but a devatā
(his mother in a previous birth, AA.i.183), seeing his trouble, reassured him by
saying that the brahmin knew neither the meaning of "head" nor of "the splitting
of it." "Who then knows it?" asked Bāvarī, and the devatā told him of the
appearance in the world of the Buddha. Forthwith he
sent his sixteen pupils -
- Ajita,
Tissametteyya, Punnaka,
Mettagū,
- Dhotaka,
Upasīva, Nanda,
Hemaka,
- Todeyya, Kappa,
Jatukannī,
Bhadrāvudha,
- Udaya, Posāla,
Mogharāja and
Pingiya
to Sāvatthi to see the Buddha and to find out if his claims to Buddha-hood
were justified. The pupils went northward, through
then, finding that the Buddha had gone to Rājagaha, they followed him there
to the Pāsānaka cetiya, passing through
When they arrived before the Buddha, they greeted him in the name of Bāvarī,
and being satisfied that he bore the characteristic signs of a Great Being,
Ajita asked Bāvarī's question of the Buddha, and when that had been answered,
each of the pupils asked him a question in turn, to which the Buddha replied.
For a problem arising out of the manner in which some of the marks were seen,
see Mil.168f.; DA.i.275f. This account is given in Sn.vs.976 1148.
According to the Commentary (SnA..603f), all Bāvarī's disciples and their
sixteen thousand followers whom they had gathered on their way, became
arahants
at the conclusion of the Buddha's sermon, save only Pingiya, Bāvarī's nephew,
who became an anĀgĀmĪ, because he had been thinking of Bāvarī when the Buddha
preached. Pingiya took leave of the Buddha and returned to Bāvarī, to whom he
recounted all these events. At the end of his recital, the Buddha appeared
before them in a ray of glory and preached to them. Pingiya thereupon became an
arahant and Bāvarī an anĀgĀmĪ.
In the time of Kassapa Buddha, Bāvarī was King
Katthavāhana. Hearing of the Buddha from
his friend, the king of Benares, he sent messengers, including his nephew, to
find out about the Buddha and to report to him. But the nephew returned with the
news of the Buddha's death, which had taken place before their arrival at
Benares. Thereupon, Katthavāhana, having accepted the Buddha's teaching, engaged
in various good deeds and was reborn after death in the Kāmāvacara deva-world.
From there he was born in the family of Pasenadi's chaplain and was the teacher
of Pasenadi's boyhood. Unwilling to remain longer in the court, he took leave of
the king and lived in the royal park as an ascetic. Then, wishing for greater
peace, he retired to an island (antaradīpa) in the
Godhāvarī where the two kings
Assaka and Alaka
gave him a tract of land, five leagues in extent, the residence of the sages of
old. It was from there that he sent his disciples to the Buddha (SnA..575ff.;
AA.i.182ff). At that time he was one hundred and twenty years old. Bāvarī was
the name of his gotta. He bore on his body three of the marks of a Great Being.
Sn.vs.1019.

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