Miscellaneous Topics – 2374
Then came King Jeyyasena’s son, King Sīhahanu, and
1. Sīhahanu’s son, Suddhodana.
2. Suddhodana’s son, Prince Siddhattha, the Bodhisatta.
Summing up all these three groups, there were 82,013 rulers, all part of an
unbroken lineage of Sakyan kings and reigning in the city of Kapilavatthu.
If the number 82,013 of this line from King Ukkāmukha to Prince Siddhattha
the Bodhisatta is added to the aforesaid number 252,556 of the rulers from the
primeval Mahā Sammata to Okkāka, the result will be 334,569.
Here, the author gives an extract from Great Cause of Learning (
Mahā-
suta-kārī
, vv. 32-33).
From the marriage of Prince Suppabuddha, son of King Añjana, and Princess
Amittā, daughter of King Sīhahanu, were born Princess Bhaddā Kañcanā or
Yasodharā and Prince Devadatta.
From the marriage of Prince Siddhattha, the Bodhisatta, and Princess Bhaddā
Kañcanā or Yasodharā, daughter of King Suppabuddha of Devadaha and Queen
Amittā, was born Prince Rāhula.
Prince Siddhattha, the Bodhisatta, had only one son, Prince Rāhula. In the
minor Chronicles, there is some fabrication that Siddhattha’s lesser wives
gave birth to other sons. But there is no trace of such a statement in older
works of Buddhist literature. Let us all, therefore, hold that there was only
one son, and that one son was no one other than Rāhula.
The Abolishing of the Era by King Añjana
King Añjana of Devadaha, the Buddha’s grandfather, and Siri Mahā Māyā’s
father, abolished the Goza Era, which was current in his time. On the new moon,
of the month of March (
Phagguṇa
), a Saturday, he abrogated 8,649 years, as
required by astrology, and did away with that era, and for its replacement he
introduced another era, commencing on the first waxing moon of the month of
April (
Citta
), a Sunday, and founded a new era to be used from that time
onwards. That era is referred to as the Great or Mahā Era in later times, and
started in 631
BCE
.
[Many of the dates in this Chronicle, the author gave according to this era.
They have been converted to BCE/CE format in this revised edition.]