THE GREAT CHRONICLE OF BUDDHAS
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hub. The Licchavis saw this but did not heed MahÈ LicchavÊ’s warning and drove on.
Bandula, as the Commander-in-Chief, after proceeding a while, pulled at the bow string
producing a thunderous sound. The Licchavis heard it but still they did not turn back. Then
Bandula sent an arrow which pierced through all the five hundred pursuing chariots, it
passed through the chest of the LicchavÊ princes and struck the ground.
The LicchavÊ princes were still unaware that they had been shot and cried: ‚Hey,
Bandula, stop!‛ all the while still following Bandula. Then Bandula, the Commander-in-
Chief, halted a while and said: ‚All of you Licchavis are dead men. I need not fight with
dead persons!‛
‚But we do not look like dead men, do we?‛
‚Then take off the mail armour from the last LicchavÊ Prince.‛
When they did as they were told, the lifeless body of the rearmost LicchavÊ prince
dropped to the floor of the chariot. Then Bandula told them to drive home and prepare for
the funeral of all of them. ‚Before taking off your mail armour, you may leave your last
word to your wives,‛ he added. The Licchavis did as they were told. All of them perished.
Bandula, the Commander-in-Chief, drove back with his wife, MallikÈ, safely home. She
bore him twin sons sixteen times so that the couple had thirty-two robust sons, all brave
and strong. They had their training completed in all the arts when they were allotted a
thousand men each as their followers. Whenever Bandula, the Commander-in-Chief,
appeared in court, he and his thirty two sons, together with thirty two thousand strong
warriors would filled the whole courtyard.
The Commander-in-Chief Bandula performing as A Judge
One day, there arose an uproar at the court of justice complaining that a miscarriage of
justice had taken place. The matter was reported to Bandula the Commander-in-Chief, who
then went to the Court of Justice, heard the case afresh, and passed judgment, declaring
who the rightful owner was. The people joined in their loud approval of the righteous
judgment.
King Pasenadi of Kosala heard the sound and asked what it was. On being told about it,
the King was very pleased and placed him in charge of the Court of Justice; the former
justices were all removed from service. Bandula thus got an additional duty as judge which
he discharged with uprightness.
The disgraced judges, being deprived of their usual bribes, plotted against Bandula, the
Commander-in-Chief. They conspired to make false allegations that Bandula was aspiring
to the throne. The King believed the words of the disgraced judges. He was greatly ill at
ease. He wanted to do away with Bandula but since Bandula was a popular figure he dared
not put Bandula to death in the city. So he invented a wicked ploy. He had his trusted men
stage an ‘uprising’ at the border regions. Bandula, the Commander-in-Chief, and his thirty-
two sons were ordered to put down the ‘uprising,’ and to bring back the insurgents. The
King sent along his chosen generals with Bandula, with orders to murder Bandula and all
his sons.
When Bandula got to the so-called area of unrest, the King's men planted as insurgents
fled. Bandula carried out measures to turn the remote region into flourishing settlements,
and returned to the city. When they were a good distance away from the city, the captains,
who were sent along with them, beheaded Bandula and his thirty-two sons.
On that day, MallikÈ, the wife of the Commander-in-Chief, was preparing to offer a meal
to the two Chief Disciples, the Venerable SÈriputta and the Venerable MahÈ MoggallÈna
together with five hundred
bhikkhus
at her home. Early that morning, she had received a
message that her husband Bandula, the Commander-in-Chief, and her thirty-two sons had
been beheaded. She kept the news to herself, having slipped in the note of message inside
her jacket. While she was attending on the two Chief Disciples at table, her maids, after
having offered rice, were bringing ghee to the table, when they accidentally broke the
vessel containing ghee. The two Chief Disciples witnessed this. The Venerable SÈriputta
asked MallikÈ: ‚What has the nature of breaking up had broken up. Don't let it prey on