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1. Aggika-Bhārādvāja. A brahmin of
Sāvatthi, of the
Bhāradvāja clan. The Buddha, while on his rounds, sees him
tending the fire and preparing oblations, and stands for alms in front of his
house. The brahmin abuses him, calling him mundaka and vasala. Thereupon the
Buddha preaches to him the Vasala Sutta (or, as it is sometimes called. the Aggika Bhāradvāja Sutta), and wins him over to the faith (Sn.21-5). The
sobriquet Aggika was given to him because he was a tender of the sacred fire.
SnA.i.174f.
2. Aggika-Bhāradvāja. A brahmin of
Rājagaha, evidently different from the above, also a fire-tender. He prepares a
meal for sacrifice, and when the Buddha, out of compassion for him, appears
before his house for alms, he says the meal is meant only for one who has the
"threefold lore" (the three Vedas). The Buddha gives the brahmin another
interpretation of the "threefold lore"; (see
Aggika Sutta). The brahmin,
thereupon, becomes a convert, enters the Order, and, in due course, attains
arahantship. S. i.166f.; SA.i.179.
3. Aggika-Bhāradvāja. The name assumed
by the jackal in the Aggika Jātaka.

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