Asokas Donations at Lumbini PDF
Asokas Donations at Lumbini PDF
Asokas Donations at Lumbini PDF
This means that in his fourteenth regnal year, A1oka directed that
something had to be done at the site of Buddha Konagamana. He had heard
about it, he knew that there was a stupa, which he has not seen personally.
Nonetheless, he pays tribute to a Buddha of old by having it enlarged.
In comparison, the text at Lumbini neither refers to the fourteenth
year nor mentions a stupa. Why did A1oka not enlarge a supposed stupa
of the 2akyamuni at Lumbini on the same occasion? Possibly, because
none was there.
In his twentieth year, A1oka arrives in person, both at Lumbini and at
the stupa of Konagamana. At Konagamanas site he has a pillar erected.
At Lumbini he sets up a vigadabhi made of stone and likewise has a pillar
erected. But there is no word about a stupa. Why? Possibly, because none
was there.
Was there a stupa at all at Lumbini? This simple question is hardly
ever addressed in the literature while, apart from Deeg (2003: 40), most
scholars seem to take the presence of a stupa at Lumbini for granted. This
is possibly the result of the stotras from the tenth century praising the
eight great stupas. They list all important events and the respective sites in
the Buddhas life, starting with Lumbini or Kapilavastu, inserting larger
cities were the Pali texts speak of minor places instead (Bagchi, 1941).
If we rid our mind from preconceived notions, we can only say that
we dont know if there was a stupa at Lumbini in the time of A1oka.
Remnants from that time are none and even the Chinese pilgrims are
silent about a stupa commemorating the birth of the Buddha (Deeg,
2003: 40). To understand what actually was there we have to reflect again
on the term athabhagiya. This term has received many explanations.
Since long it has been taken to denote a reduction of taxes from onesixth to one-eigth. In 1991, I pointed out that this assumption makes
A1oka a sort of bazari, who just releases his grip slightly without waiving
his rights completely. How much tax could he have expected from a tiny
village in the Terai? Was it adequate for the king of India to dismiss, say,
This translation is based on the report about the division of the ashes
of the Buddha into eight parts as it is found in the Dighanikaya (Pali
Text Society Edition, II: 167). Here we learn that one part of the ashes
each went to Rajagrha, Vai1ali, Kapilavastu, Allakappa, Ramagrama,
Fig. 9.4: Broken and collapsed pedestal with golden lid of a reliquary from
Rijal (nd)
Fig. 9.5: Contents of a reliquary found together with the golden lid from
Rijal (nd)
I dont think so. The original tree may still have been standing, since Sal
(Shorea robusta) grows slowly. How does one mark such a spot? It could
be fenced in, or it could be marked by a pedestal, or by both.
It is dangerous to etymologize the phrase silavigadabhica, which may
consist of two or of three words, depending on how one interprets the
is more than the weight of some of the smaller A1okan pillars. With
its inner part chiselled away, the railing still must have weighed several
tons. The workmanship is perfect, the polish is excellent, so A1oka has
already been suspected as the sponsor of this work. Unfortunately, the
railing has found its place north of the so-called Jagat Singh stupa at
Sarnath and an early surmise was that it once crowned this stupa as a
vedika and broke when it fell down from there. Against this we must
say that no other stupa shows any sign of a monolithic vedika at the top.
On the other hand, John Marshall, in his excavation report of 190607
(Marshall and Konow, 190607: 89), says:
The railing is in fact a remarkable tour de force, and was undoubtedly
erected, in the first instance, on some especially hallowed spot. Whether this
spot is the one on which it now stands, cannot be definitely affirmed. The
railing is unfortunately badly fractured, and must have been so from an early
age, as there are large breakages on the north and west sides, which had been
made good with brick-work long before the main shrine, as it now stands, was
built. It is quite possible, therefore, that the railing originally stood elsewhere
and was transferred to this spot in sections, after it had been broken, perhaps
at the time that the later inscription was engraved upon it.
Fig. 9.9: Rubbing of an inscription on the lower front of the railing from
Oertel, ASIAR 19045, plates XXXII, IX
Fig. 9.10: Rubbing of an inscription on the lowest bar of the railing from
Marshall and Konow, ASIAR 19067, plates XXX, IV
divided into two parts, one on each side of the central bar (Marshall
and Konow, 190607: 96). This again is a very low situation, and it
must have been incised there when this fragment stood already upright.
Konow realized that the east side text is older, with one part erased
and he concluded that the south side text is nothing but an improved
version of the re-worked east side text. Still he misunderstands the
purpose of both inscriptions, in that he sees an anxiety evinced by the
Sarvastivadins to be considered as the donors of the railing (Marshall
and Konow 190607: 96). As we now know, a parigraha does not
refer to the donor, but to the donee. Thus, the Sarvastivadins were
anxious to be recognized as the owners or caretakers of the railing, not
as the donors. Finally, Salomon (2009: 118) remarked that the second
text too shows traces of reworking, indicating in both cases that the
Sarvastivadins would have succeeded in replacing another branch. To
document possession, the name of the earlier caretakers was erased on
the railing, just like the Sammaitiyas in turn some time later erased the
name of the Sarvastivadins from the pillar of A1oka, which as well was
regarded as a parigraha (Falk, 2006: 212).
A1okas pillar and this railing at Sarnath thus received the same
treatment: Both were regarded as given into the care of a certain group
of monks, and these monks used all means to substantiate their claim.
Why so? Pillar and railing seem to have attracted visitors; they emanated
a sanctity of their own and pilgrims were prompted to leave a token of
respect, preferably coins. The pillar was thus a means of income, labha,
and so was the railing.
The pillar palimpsest made it clear that Sarvastivadins and
Sammatiyas were involved in the change of possession, with the latter
leaving the latest evidence on the pillar. On the railing the contrary
could be the case, with the Sarvastivadins overwriting the name of the
Sammatiyas. The possibly mutual overwritings attest to two rival groups
present at Sarnath at the same time. Who was first? We do not know but
Xuanzangs report on Kapilavastu tells us that there were thirty monks
of the Sammatiya School (Deeg, 2003: 50), while other schools are
not mentioned. From this it seems probable that Sammatiyas were also
present at Lumbini.
Let us now look at the railing. It was re-erected at Sarnath on a brick
platform. We do not know when, but certainly after A1oka. Inside we
see a strange construction (see Figure 7.7). On top of a square pedestal, a
round miniature stupa was added later, missing the centre of the pedestal
intentionally. What does this mean?
The square pedestal below is removed to the northwestern corner,
partly hiding the bricks that replace the missing beams. The stupa placed
on top of it, rather, marks the centre of the railing. It was added later, as
was seen by Marshall and by Kumar (19856). Its position would have
looked more natural had the inside of the railing been filled with earth,
covering the pedestal below. When Oertel started excavating, only the
top of the railing and the brick stupa was above ground.
To make a long story short: I would suggest that we identify this
edifice at Sarnath as the broken parts of the vigadabhi from Lumbini,
which in that location could have enclosed a flat pedestal. After the
railing was destroyed in Lumbini, two remaining sides and one corner
piece were transferred to Sarnath by local Sammatiya monks and
re-erected on a brick base, making use of brick walls to supply the
missing side parts. The Sammatiyas noted their possession on one side
of the railing in a script of the first century bce. This was overwritten
in the second century ce by the Sarvastivadins who added a second
possession note on the second large fragment as well. Inside the
reconstruction, a square pedestal was built of bricks, probably copying
a similar pedestal at the original location.
The original pedestal at Lumbini could well have housed a reliquary
containing part of the ashes of the Buddha, making the site astabhagika,
independent of any stupa.
At Lumbini, the railing and pedestal would thus have marked the site
of the birth of the 2akyamuni below the branches of a tree. The pedestal
could have served as a table for flowers or any other kind of donation.
Let me now repeat the text from Lumbini:
When king Priyadar1in, dear to the gods, had been anointed for twenty years,
he came in person and paid reverence. Being aware that the Buddha was born
here, he had a stone fencing constructed on the site [of the birth] and a stone
pillar erected. Being aware that the Lord was born here, he made the village of
Lumbini tax-free and and provided it with a share in the eight parts [the ashes
of the Buddha had originally been divided].
Notes
1. The latest extensive survey is by Tsukamoto (2005) which includes ten
interpretations, to which the one by Deeg (2003, 20f.) must be added, who
takes the term equalling 1ila-vigadha-abdhi, a stone bathing pond, a solution
that violates several sound laws as well as archaeological evidence. For my own
view cf. Falk (1991).
2. Dighanikaya, Pali Text Society, II:166. bhagavato sarirani atthadha samam
suvibhattam vibhajitva.
3. sabbeva bhonto sahita samagga sammodamana karom atthabhage. Vittharika
hontu disasu thupa bahu jana cakkhumato pasanna; repeated in other words in
the dhatunidhanakatha of the second pariccheda of the Dhatuvamsa.
4. At least according to Xuanzangs report on a place 50 li south (Dighanikaya,
Pali Text Society, Vol. II, p. 166, 10 to 20 km) of Kapilavastu where the relics of
the complete body of Krakucchanda were interred (cf. Deeg, 2003: 52).
5. Bagchi (1941: 225) cites this text in the conviction that it proves the existence
of old stupas at the important places in the Buddhas life, in line with the new set
of eight stupas in the stotras. T.N. Mishra (2004) takes caitya here to denote a
temple, a very unlikely proposal.