|
A celebrated monastic establishment on
the north side of Anurādhapura, consisting of a vihāra and a mighty thūpa. Only
the thūpa now stands. It was built by King Vattagāmani Abhaya on the site of the
ancient Titthārāma, 217 years, 10 months and 10 days after the founding of the
Mahāvihāra (Mhv.Xxxvii.78-83). Tradition states that when the king was fleeing
from the Tamils he passed the Titthārāma on his way, and the Nigantha Giri, who
then lived there, made insulting remarks about him. The king vowed, if he were
returned to the throne, to build a vihāra on that spot (Mhv.Xxxvii.43-4); he
fulfilled his vow, and the name of the vihāra was a combination of his own name
and of that of the Nigantha. The monastery was given in charge of the Thera
Mahātissa of Kuppikala and of two other monks, Kuppikala having befriended the
king in his misfortunes.
The vihāra advanced rapidly in wealth
and in power, but quite soon the monks seceded from the Mahāvihāra fraternity
because, according to the Mahāvamsa (Mhv.Xxxvii.95ff), an incumbent of the
Mahāvihāra, Mahātissa by name, was expelled from the monastery for frequenting
lay families. His disciple, Bahalamassutissa, went in anger to Abhayagiri and
formed a separate faction.
A Sinhalese chronicle, the Nikāya
Sahgraha (pp.11, 12; also P.L.C.42), states that these dissentients were soon
after joined by a body of Vajjiputtaka monks from the Pallārāma in India, under
the leadership of a teacher called Dhammaruci, and the sect which they together
founded in Ceylon became known as the Dhammaruci Nikāya, with headquarters in
Abhayagiri.
For quite a long while the two
fraternities, that of the Mahāvihāra and that of the Abhayagiri, seem to have
lived in amity, alike enjoying the munificence of patrons (Ibid., 52f.;
Mhv.Xxxv.20, 57, 119-22; xxxvi.7-14). Thus, Gajabāhukagāmani raised the height
of Abhayuttara-thūpa (as the thūpa at Abhayagiri seems to have been called) and
made the Gāmanitissa-tank to be used for the cultivation of land for the
maintenance of the vihara (Ibid., xxxv.119-22); Kanitthatissa built a splendid
structure in the same vihāra for the Thera Mahānāga; it was called the
Ratanapāsāda (xxxvi.7, 8.).
But in the reign of Vohārakatissa, the
Abhayagiri monks openly adopted the heretical Vaitulya Pitaka (of the
Mahāyānists see Mhv. trans. 259, n.2). An inquiry was held by the king with the
help of his minister Kapila, the heretical books were burnt and the monks of
Abhayagiri disgraced (Mhv.Xxxvi.40-1).
Soon afterwards, however, the heretics
won over the king Mahāsena to their side and destroyed the establishment of the
Mahāvihāra, carrying away all the materials to Abhayagiri (P.L.C. 53;
Mhv.Xxxvii.10-16). Later, Mahāsena repented of his ways, burnt the books of the
Abhayagiri monks and transferred his patronage to the Mahāvihāra. But the
Abhayagiri fraternity must soon have recovered its prestige, for we find
Mahāsena's successor, Sirimeghavanna, planting a bodhi tree (called Tissavasabha)
(Cv.trans. i.9, n.3) in Abhayagiri and surrounding it with a stone terrace
((Cv.xxxvii.91)). A few years later both Mahānāma (409-31) and his queen became
active supporters of Abhaya Giri (Cv.xxxvii.212). Dhātusena is stated to have
enlarged the Abhayuttara-vihāra (Cv.xxxviii.61), and Silākāla is credited with
several benefactions to the vihāra and its bodhi tree (Cv.xli.31-2); Mahānāga
gave the weaver's village of Jambela to the Uttaravihāra (another name for
Abhayagiri; see Cv. trans. i.8, n.2; 61, n.6.); Aggabodhi I. built a
bathing-tank there (Cv.xlii.28), while his successor, Aggabodhi II., built the
Dāthāggabodhi house, so called after himself and his queen (Cv.xlii.63-5).
In the monastery at Abhayagiri there
seems to have been a stone image of the Buddha, referred to under various names,
Silāsambuddha, Kālasela, Kālasatthā, Silāsatthā and Silāmayamuninda. Cv.xxxix.7;
xxxviii.65; 61.2; see also vv.51, 77, 87. There was also in Abhayagiri another
image called the Abhiseka (q.v.).
It was evidently held peculiarly sacred.
Buddhadāsa placed a nāgamani in its eye (Cv.xxxvii.123); this was soon lost, and
we find Dhātusena replacing it, adorning and decorating the statue in various
ways (For details see Cv.xxxviii.62ff). Silāmeghavanna had it restored and
redecorated and made provision for its maintenance (Cv.xliv.68). The same king,
we are told, attempted to carry out a reform of the Abhayagiri monks, but this
attempt ultimately brought disaster on him (Cv.xliv.75ff). Jetthatissa gave to
the vihāra the village of Mahādāragiri (Cv.xliv.96). Dāthopatissa built the
Kappūra-parivena attached to the vihāra, and also a monastery Tiputthulla,
encroaching on the precincts of the Mahāvihāra, notwithstanding the protests of
the monks belonging to the
Latter (Cv.xlv.29ff). Aggabodhi VII,
added the Sabhattudesabhoga (Cv.xlviii.64), and Mahinda II. the
Mahālekha-parivena as well as the many-storeyed Ratanapāsāda with its costly
ornamentation (Cv.xlviii.135-40; see also Geiger's trans. 123, n.2).
Sena I. built the Virankurārāma and gave
it to the Mahāsanghikas (Cv.l.68-9), while his consort, Sanghā, erected a
dwelling house, Mahindasena (Cv.l.79), and his courtier, Uttara, yet another
dwelling house, called Uttarasena, for the maintenance of which he provided. Two
other courtiers, Vajira and Rakkhasa, built two dwelling houses, called
respectively Vajirasenaka and Rakkhasa (Cv.l.83).
In the reign of Sena II. the Pamsukulika
monks, who till then had evidently lived in Abhayagiri (Cv. trans. i.108, n.1),
separated and formed special groups. Sanghā, queen of Udaya II., erected and
endowed the building known as the Sanghasenapabbata (Cv.li.86-7). Kassapa IV.
built a pāsāda bearing his name and assigned to it a village (Cv.lii.13; Cv.trs.
i.162, n.4), while his successor, Kassapa V., erected the Bhandikā-parivena and
the Silāmeghapabbata, endowing each with a village (Cv.lii.58-9).
Sena III. spent 40,000 kahāpanas for a
stone paving round the cetiya. The Abhayagiri monks befriended both Vijayabāhu
I. (then known as Kitti) and his brother, and out of gratitude Vijayabāhu built
the Uttaramūla-parivena, which was probably attached to the vihara itself
(Cv.lvii.18, 23).
In the reign of Parakkamabāhu I., when
that monarch had established himself on the throne, it is said that he tried to
reform the monks of the Abhayagiri, but he found the task hopeless
(Cv.lxxviii.21ff). He found that the Abhayagiri-thūpa had been destroyed by the
vandalism of the Tamils, and he had it restored to a height of 160 cubits
(Cv.lxxviii.98). When Anurādhapura was finally abandoned, Abhayagiri fell into
ruin and decay, the monastery being completely destroyed.
It is clear that even at the outset
there was considerable rivalry between the monks of Abhayagiri and those of the
Mahāvihāra. The rivalry seems originally to have been mainly personal, but it
later developed into differences in doctrinal opinion. Of the exact nature of
these latter we have no information, owing, chiefly, to the book-burnings
carried out by pious kings in the excess of their zeal for the purity of the
Faith. For the same reason we are unable to ascertain what part, if any, the
Abhayagiri fraternity played in literary activity. It has been suggested,
however, that both the Jātakatthakathā (P.L.C.124, 125) and the
Sahassavatthuppakarana (P.L.C.128), another compilation of tales, were the work
of the Abhayagiri monks.
Fa-Hsien evidently spent the two years
of his stay in Ceylon with the Abhayagiri fraternity because the books he took
away with him were those of the unorthodox schools. According to him, there
were, at this time, 5,000 monks in Abhayagiri (Fa Hsien's Travels, 67ff).
In the chronicles Abhayagiri is referred
to under several names Abhayuttara, Abhayavihāra, Abhayācala and Uttaravihāra.

|