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A woodland in Veluvana.
Here food (nivāpa) was regularly placed for the squirrels. It is said that
once a certain raja went there for a picnic and, having over-drunk, fell asleep.
His retinue, seeing him sleeping, wandered away, looking for flowers and fruits.
A snake, attracted by the smell of liquor, approached the king from a
neighbouring tree-trunk, and would have bitten him had not a tree-sprite,
assuming the form of a squirrel, awakened him by her chirping. In gratitude the
rājā gave orders that thenceforth the squirrels in that locality should be fed
regularly. UdA.60; SnA.ii.419.
According to some, it was the gift of a merchant named Kalandaka (Beal.:
Romantic Legend, p.315); Tibetan sources identify the rājā with
Bimbisāra and say that the snake was a
reincarnation of the owner whose land the king had confiscated. According to
these same sources the name is Kalantaka and is described as the name of a bird
(Rockhill: op. cit., p.43).
Kalandakanivāpa was evidently a favourite resort of the
Buddha and his monks.

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