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The name given to a Great Being, destined to become either
a Cakka-vatti or a Buddha. He carries on his person the following thirty two
marks (Mahāpurisalakkhanāni) (these are given at D.ii.17f.; iii.142ff.;
M.ii.136f ):
- he has feet of level tread;
- on his soles are marks of wheels with spokes, felloes
and hubs;
- his heels project;
- his digits are long;
- his hands and feet are soft;
- his fingers and toes straight;
- his ankles like rounded shells;
- his legs like an antelope's;
- standing, he can touch his knees without bending;
- his privacies are within a sheath;
- he is of golden hue;
- his skin so smooth that no dust clings to it;
- the down on his body forms single hairs;
- each hair is straight, blue black and at the top
curls to the right;
- his frame is straight;
- his body has seven convex surfaces;
- his chest is like a lion's;
- his back flat between the shoulders;
- his sheath is the same as his height;
- his bust is equally rounded;
- his taste is consummate;
- he has a lion's jaws;
- has forty teeth;
- they are regular, and continuous;
- lustrous;
- his tongue is long;
- his voice like that of a karavīka bird;
- his eyes intensely black;
- his eyelashes like a cows;
- between his eyelashes are soft, white hairs like
cotton down;
- his head is like a turban.
The theory of Mahāpurisa is pre Buddhistic. Several
passages in the Pitakas (E.g., D.i.89, 114, 120; A.i.163; M.ii.136; Sn.vs.600,
1000, etc.) mention brahmins as claiming that this theory of the Mahāpurisa and
his natal marks belonged to their stock of hereditary knowledge. The Buddhists,
evidently, merely adopted the brahmin tradition in this matter as in so many
others. But they went further. In the Lakkhana Sutta (D.iii.142ff) they sought
to explain how these marks arose, and maintained that they were due entirely to
good deeds done in a former birth and could only be continued in the present
life by means of goodness. Thus the marks are merely incidental; most of them
are so absurd, considered as the marks of a human being, that they are probably
mythological in origin, and a few of them seem to belong to solar myths, being
adaptations to a man, of poetical epithets applied to the sun or even to the
personification of human sacrifice. Some are characteristic of human beauty, and
one or two may possibly be reminiscences of personal bodily peculiarities
possessed by some great man, such as Gotama himself.
Apart from these legendary beliefs, the Buddha had his own
theory of the attributes of a Mahāpurisa as explained in the Mahāpurisa Sutta
(S.v.158) and the Vassakāra Sutta (A.ii.35f).
Buddhaghosa says (MA.ii.761) that when the time comes for
the birth of a Buddha, the Suddhāvāsa Brahmās visit the earth in the guise of
brahmins and teach men about these bodily signs as forming part of the Vedic
teaching so that thereby auspicious men may recognize the Buddha. On his death
this knowledge generally vanishes. He defines a Mahāpurisa as one who is great
owing to his panidhi, samādāna, ńāna and karunā. A Mahāpurisa can be happy in
all conditions of climate. DA.ii.794.
Bāvarī had three Mahāpurisalakkhanā; he could touch his
forehead with his tongue, he had a mole between his eyebrows (unnā), and his
privacies were contained within a sheath. Sn.vs.1022.

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