'SrÄvastÄ«' or SÄvatthÄ« (
Chinese: èˆè¡›), a city of ancient
India, was one of the six largest cities in India during
Gautama Buddha’s lifetime. The city was located in the fertile
Gangetic plains in the present day’s
Gonda district of
Uttar Pradesh.
Jetavana monastery was a famous monastery close to Savatthi.
Origin of Sravasti
According to the epic
Ramayana, Sravasti was a new city created for Lava (the son of
Raghava Rama). Rama divided his
Kosala Kingdom into two parts and installed his son Lava at Sravasti and another son Kusha at
Kushavati, another town in Kosala. According to the
Mahabharata, the origin of Sravasti lies with the legendary king
Shravasta. According to Buddhist tradition,
the city was called Savatthi because the sage
Savattha lived there. Another tradition says there was a
caravanserai there, and people meeting there asked each other what they had ("Kim bhandam atthi?"), then replied "Sabbam atthi" (meaning "we have all things", as in everything). And the name of the city was based on the reply
[1].
Sravasti in the Buddha's time
Savatthi was located on the banks of the river Aciravati (now called the
Rapti river). It was the capital city of the kingdom of Kosala, and its king was called
Pasenadi, who was a desciple of Buddha.
Buddhaghosa says
[2] that, in the Buddha's day, there were fifty seven thousand families in Savatthi, and that it was the chief city in the country of 'Kasi
Kosala', which was three hundred leagues in extent and had eighty thousand villages. He stated the population of Sávatthi to have been 180 million
[3]. The road from
Rajagaha to Savatthi passed through
Vesali, and the Parayanavagga
[4] gives as the resting places between the two cities:
Setavya,
Kapilavatthu,
Kusinara,
Pava and
Bhoganagara. Further on, there was a road running southwards from Savatthi through
Saketa to
Kosambi. Between Saketa and Savatthi was located
Toranavatthu[5].
The Buddha passed the greater part of his monastic life in Savatthi. His first visit to Savatthi was at the invitation of Anathapindika, whom he met in
Rajagaha. The main monasteries in Sravasti were the Jetavana and the Pubbarama. Savatthi also contained the monastery of
Rajakarama, built by Pasenadi, opposite Jetavana. Not far from the city was a dark forest called the
Andhavana, where some monks and nun went to live. Outside the city gate of Savatthi was a fisherman's village of five hundred families
[6].
The chief patrons of the Buddha in Savatthi were
Anathapindika,
Visakha,
Suppavasa and
Pasenadi[7]. When
Bandhula left
Vesali he came to live in Savatthi.
Woodward states
[8] that, of the four
Nikayas, 871 suttas are said to have been preached in Savatthi; 844 of which are in
Jetavana, 23 in the
Pubbarama, and 4 in the suburbs of Savatthi. These suttas are made up of 6 in the
Digha Nikaya, 75 in the
Majjhima Nikaya, 736 in the
Samyutta Nikaya, and 54 in the
Anguttara Nikaya. The Commentaries state that the Buddha spent twenty five
rainy seasons in Sávatthi, this leaving only twenty to be spent elsewhere. Of the 25 rainy seasons Buddha lived in Sravasti
[9], he spent 19 in the monastery named
Jetavana, and 6 in the monastery called
Pubbarama. Thus, Sravasti is the place where Buddha lived the longest amount of time, and it is the place where he gave the largest amount of discourses and instructions.
Savatthi is the place where the
Twin Miracle (
Pali:Yamaka Patihara) took place, in which Buddha made a demonstration of his supernatural powers for the purpose of silencing certain believers of other faiths who proclaimed that the Buddha was incapable of performing supernatural miracles. The Buddhist commentarial tradition says that Savatthi is the scene of each Buddha's Yamaka pátiháriya
[10]; Gotama Buddha performed this miracle under the Gandamba tree.
The Chinese Pilgrim
Hiouen Thsang found the old city in ruins, but recorded the sites of various buildings
[11].
Current Sravasti
Of the ancient Savatthi the city walls are still standing. Within these, the remains of 3 ancient buildings can be visited:
Angulimala's stupa,
Anathapindika's stupa, and an old temple dedicated to a
Jain Tirthankara. Outside of Savatthi is located the stupa where the
Twin Miracle (
Pali:Yamaka Patihara) took place. The site of Jetavana monastery is the main
pilgrim destination, with
meditation and
chanting mainly done at the
Gandhakuti (Buddha's hut) and the
Anandabodhi tree. Buddhist monasteries from the following countries have been constructed at Sravasti: Thailand, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Tibet and China.
External links
notes
1. SNA.i.300; PSA. 367
2. Sp.iii.614
3. SNA.i.371
4. SN.vss.1011 13
5. S.iv.374
6. DhA.iv.40
7. DhA.i.330
8. KS.v.xviii
9. DhA.i.4
10. DhA.iii.205; cf. Mtu.iii.115; J.i.88
11. Beal, op. cit., ii.1 13