|
1. Uruvelā. A locality on the banks of
the Nerañjarā, in the neighbourhood of the Bodhi-tree at Buddhagayā. Here, after
leaving Alāra and
Uddaka, the Bodhisatta practised during six years the most
severe penances. His companions were the Pañcavaggiya-monks, who, however, left
him when he relaxed the severity of his austerities (M.i.166). The place chosen
by the Bodhisatta for his penances was called Senā-nigama.
The Jātaka version
(J.i.67f) contains additional particulars. It relates that once the Bodhisatta
fainted under his austerities, and the news was conveyed to his father that he
was dead. Suddhodana, however, refused to believe this, remembering the prophecy
of Kāladevala. When the Bodhisatta decided to take ordinary food again, it was
given to him by a girl, Sujātā, daughter of
Senānī of the township of Senānī. In
the neighbourhood of Uruvelā were also the Ajapāla Banyan-tree, the Mucalinda-tree
and the Rājāyatana-tree, where the Buddha spent some time after his
Enlightenment, and where various shrines, such as the
Animisa-cetiya, the
Ratanacankama-cetiya and the
Ratanaghara later came into existence.
From Uruvela the Buddha
went to Isipatana, but after, he had made sixty-one arahants and sent them out
on tour to preach the Doctrine, he returned to Uruvelā, to the
Kappāsikavanasanda and converted the
Bhaddavaggiyā (Vin.i.23f; DhA.i.72). At
Uruvelā dwelt also the Tebhātika-Jatilas: Uruvela-Kassapa,
Nadī-Kassapa and
Gayā-Kassapa,
who all became followers of the Buddha (Vin.i.25).
According to the Ceylon Chronicles
(E.g., Mhv.i.17ff; Dpv. i.35, 38, 81), it was while spending the rainy season at
Uruvelā, waiting for the time when the Kassapa brothers should be ripe for
conversion, that the Buddha, on the full-moon day of Phussa, in the ninth month
after the Enlightenment, paid his first visit to Ceylon.
Mention is made of several temptations
of the Buddha while he dwelt at Uruvela, apart from the supreme contest with
Māra, under the Bodhi-tree. Once Māra came to him in the darkness of the night
in the guise of a terrifying elephant, trying to frighten him. On another dark
night when the rain was falling drop by drop, Māra came to the Buddha and
assumed various wondrous shapes, beautiful and ugly. Another time Māra tried to
fill the Buddha's mind with doubt as to whether he had really broken away from
all fetters and won complete Enlightenment (S.i.103ff). Seven years after the
Buddha's Renunciation, Māra made one more attempt to make the Buddha
discontented with his lonely lot and it was then, when Māra had gone away
discomfited, that Mars's three daughters, Tanhā, Ratī and Ragā, made a final
effort to draw the Buddha away from his purpose (S.i.124f).
It was at Uruvelā,
too, that the Buddha had misgivings in his own mind as to the usefulness of
preaching the Doctrine which he had realised, to a world blinded by passions and
prejudices. The Brahmā Sahampatī thereupon entreated the Buddha not to give way
to such diffidence (S.i.136ff; Vin.i.4f). It is recorded that either on this
very occasion or quite soon after, the thought arose in the Buddha's mind that
the sole method of winning Nibbāna was to cultivate the four
satipatthānas and
that Sahampatī visited the Blessed One and confirmed his view (S.v.167; and
again, 185). A different version occurs elsewhere (S.v.232), where the thought
which arose in the Buddha's mind referred to the five controlling abilities (saddhindriya,
etc.), and Brahmā tells the Buddha that in the time of Kassapa he had been a
monk named Sahaka and that then he had practised these five abilities.
The name Uruvela is explained as meaning
a great sandbank (mahā velā, mahanto vālikarāsi). A story is told which
furnishes an alternative explanation: Before the Buddha's appearance in the
world, ten thousand ascetics lived in this locality, and they decided among
themselves that if any evil thought arose in the mind of any one of them, he
should carry a basket of sand to a certain spot. The sand so collected
eventually formed a great bank (AA.ii.476; UdA.26; MA.i.376; MT.84). In the
Divyāvadāna (p.202), the place is called Uruvilvā. The Mahāvastu (ii.207)
mentions four villages as being in Uruvelā: Praskandaka, Balākalpa, Ujjangala
and Jangala.
2. Uruvelā. A township in Ceylon,
founded by one of the ministers of Vijaya (Dpv.ix.35; Mhv.vii.45). According to
a different tradition (Mhv.ix.9; perhaps this refers to another settlement), it
was founded by a brother of Bhaddakacānā, called Uruvela. Uruvelā was evidently
a port as well, because we are told that when Dutthagāmanī decided to build the
Mahā-Thūpa, six wagonloads of pearls as large as myrobalan fruit, mixed with
coral, appeared on dry land at the Uruvela-pattana (Mhv.Xxviii.36). Near Uruvelā
was the Vallī-vihāra, built by Subha (Mhv.Xxxv.58).
Geiger thinks (Mhv.Trs.189, n.2) that
Uruvelā was near the mouth of the modern Kalā Oya, five yojanas - i.e. about
forty miles - to the west of Anurādhapura.
3. Uruvelā. A village to which Queen Sugalā (q.v.) fled, taking the sacred relies, the Alms Bowl and the Tooth Relic
(Cv.lxxiv.88). It is identified with Etimole about five or six miles south-east
of Monorāgala (Cv.Trs.ii.29, n.4). It is perhaps to be identified with
Uruvelamandapa.

|