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1. Bodhi
He lived at Sumsumāragiri in the
Bhagga country and built a palace called
Kokanada. When the palace was completed, the
Buddha was staying at
Bhesakalāvana near by, and Bodhi sent a message by
Sañjikāputta, inviting the Buddha to the
palace, that he might bless it by being its first occupant. The Buddha agreed to
come and, the next day, arrived with the monks for a meal. Bodhi came, with his
retinue, to meet them at the foot of the steps and asked the Buddha to step on
to the carpeting which was spread there. Three times the request was made, three
times the Buddha kept silence. Thereupon Ananda
asked for the carpeting to be removed, saying that the Buddha's refusal to step
thereon was as an example to future generations. After the meal, Bodhi had a
discussion with the Buddha (Vin.ii.127f.; M.ii.91ff), recorded in the
Bodhirājakumāra Sutta.
The Commentary adds (MA.ii.739ff) that one of the reasons for the Buddha's
refusal to step on the carpet was that he knew the thoughts of Bodhi. Bodhi was
saying to himself: "If I am to have a son, the Buddha will step on this carpet,
if not, he will not." The Buddha knew also that Bodhi was not destined to have a
son because in a previous life he and his wife had lived on an island and eaten
young birds.
DhA.iii.137ff adds that the Buddha actually told Bodhi of the non fulfillment
of his wish for a son, and related to him the story of his past life in which he
and his wife ate birds' eggs.
Bodhi was the son of Udena, king of
Kosambi, and his mother was the daughter of
Candappajjota. Bodhi was skilled in the
art of managing elephants (see also M.ii.94), which art he learned from his
father, a master in this direction. It is said (M.ii.97) that, while Bodhi
was yet in his mother's womb, she visited the Buddha at the
Ghositārāma in Kosambī and declared that
whatever child was born to her it would accept the Buddha, his teaching and the
Order, as its abiding refuge. Later, after Bodhi's birth, his nurse took him to
the Buddha at Bhesakalāvana and made a similar declaration. When, therefore,
Bodhi acknowledged the Buddha as his teacher, at the conclusion of the
Bodhirājakumāra Sutta, he was seeking the
Buddha's refuge for the third time.
Some accounts* of the building of Bodhi's palace add that as it was being
completed, Bodhi conceived the idea of killing the architect or of blinding him
so that he could never design a similar house for anyone else. He confided this
idea to Sanjikāputta, who warned the
architect. The latter, therefore, obtained special timber from Bodhi, saying it
was for the palace, and made out of it a wooden bird large enough to hold
himself and his family. When it was ready, he made it fly out of the window, and
he and his family escaped to the Himālaya country, where he founded a kingdom
and came to be known as King Katthavāhana.
* E.g., DhA.iii.134ff.; in J. iii.157 it is stated briefly that Bodhi did
actually blind the architect. In a previous birth he put out the eyes of one
thousand warriors. See the Dhonasākha
Jātaka.
2. Bodhi. One of the eight brahmins who recognized the signs at the
birth of the Buddha. J. i.56; in the Milinda (236) he is called Subodhi.
3. Bodhi. Called Bodhikumāra. The Bodhisatta born as an ascetic. For
his story see the Cullabodhi Jātaka.
J.iv.22ff.
4. Bodhi. Also called Mahābodhi;
the Bodhisatta born as an ascetic. See the
Mahābodhi Jātaka. J. v.227ff.
5. Bodhi. A monk of Ceylon. At his request Silāmeghavanna proclaimed a
regulative act against the undisciplined monks of Abhayagiri-vihāra.
The monks, expelled under the act, conspired together and killed Bodhi. But the
king renewed his exertions and, in memory of Bodhi, succeeded in purifying the
Order. Cv.xliv.75.
6. Bodhi. A descendant of Dāthopatissa. He married Buddhā (q.v.), and
had by her a daughter named Lokitā. Cv.lvii.40.
7. Bodhi. Lankādhinātha Bodhi. General of Mānābharana (2). He was
slain in battle. Cv.lxx.294, 309.

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