The Life Stories of the Female Lay Disciples – 2219
King Bimbisāra held a conference with his ministers, who said: “Great King, we
cannot afford to spare any of our householders who are of inexhaustible
resources. But, to satisfy the King of Kosalans, let us send the son of one of your
five such householders.” King Bimbisāra agreed to the proposal. Dhanañjaya,
son of Meṇḍaka, was requested to move to the Kosalan kingdom.
Herein, the commentary on the Dhamma Verses (
Dhammapada
) states that
the Kosalan King and King Bimbisāra were brothers-in-law, in a double
sense. King Bimbisāra could not fail to satisfy the wish of the Kosalan
King. He also could not offend his five famous householders, and so he
requested Dhanañjaya to go and settle in the Kosalan kingdom.
Dhanañjaya agreed and he was sent to the King of the Kosalans.
After moving his family from Bhaddiya to the Kosalan kingdom, Dhanañjaya
identified a location which had great potential for human settlement. He asked
the Kosalan King as to whose territory that location belonged to. And being told
that it lay within the Kosalan kingdom, he further asked as to how far it was
from Sāvatthī, the capital. The king answered: “It is one league from here to
Sāvatthī.” Then Dhanañjaya said to the king: “Great King, Sāvatthī is not big
enough for my householder to live in. If your majesty would agree, I would
settle in this location so that my big following can live in comfort.” The king
consented, and Dhanañjaya founded a town at that location. Since it was a
location of the settler’s choice, it was named “Sāketa.”
In Sāvatthī, Puṇṇavaḍḍhana, son of Migāra the householder, had come of age.
His father considered that it was time for his son to get married and he told his
kinsmen to look for a bride for his son. The bride should come from a
householder’s family. Intelligent and discreet scouts were sent to look for such a
bride but none could be found in the city of Sāvatthī. The scouts therefore went
to Sāketa.
One day, Visākhā went to a lake, which was outside Sāketa, accompanied by 500
attendant maidens who were of the same age as her, to bathe and frolic in the
water. At that time, the scouts from Sāvatthī had left Sāketa, without success in
looking for a suitable lady. They resorted to standing at the town’s gate. Then
rain started to pour down. Visākhā and her companions left the town to seek
shelter from the rain in a public rest house. The 500 maidens ran into the rest
house. None of them caught the eyes of the scouts as promising. But, coming
behind these maidens was young Visākhā, who was walking towards the rest