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A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms
img img A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms img Chapter 10 GANDHARA. LEGENDS OF BUDDHA.
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Chapter 10 GANDHARA. LEGENDS OF BUDDHA.

The travellers, going downwards from this towards the east, in five days came to the country of Gandhara,(1) the place where Dharma-vivardhana,(2) the son of Asoka,(3) ruled. When Buddha was a Bodhisattva, he gave his eyes also for another man here;(4) and at the spot they have also reared a large tope, adorned with layers of gold and silver plates. The people of the country were mostly students of the hinayana.

NOTES

(1) Eitel says "an ancient kingdom, corresponding to the region about

Dheri and Banjour." But see note 5.

(2) Dharma-vivardhana is the name in Sanskrit, represented by the Fa

Yi {.} {.} of the text.

(3) Asoka is here mentioned for the first time;-the Constantine of

the Buddhist society, and famous for the number of viharas and

topes which he erected. He was the grandson of Chandragupta (i.q.

Sandracottus), a rude adventurer, who at one time was a refugee in the

camp of Alexander the Great; and within about twenty years afterwards

drove the Greeks out of India, having defeated Seleucus, the Greek

ruler of the Indus provinces. He had by that time made himself king

of Magadha. His grandson was converted to Buddhism by the bold and

patient demeanour of an Arhat whom he had ordered to be buried alive,

and became a most zealous supporter of the new faith. Dr. Rhys Davids

(Sacred Books of the East, vol. xi, p. xlvi) says that "Asoka's

coronation can be fixed with absolute certainty within a year or two

either way of 267 B.C."

(4) This also is a Jataka story; but Eitel thinks it may be a myth,

constructed from the story of the blinding of Dharma-vivardhana.

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