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A nāga king, converted by the Buddha..
He is mentioned together with Āravāla, Dhanapāla and Pārileyyaka. The name
appears in passages where the Buddha's powers are discussed (E.g., BuA.29). "Was
not the Buddha honoured even by beasts such as Āravāla, etc.?"
The story of the conversion of Apalāla
does not, as far as I can discover, occur in the canonical books. In the
Samantapāsādikā (iv.742) the story of the conversion of Apalāla (Apalāladamana)
is given among the stories not included in the Three Councils (sangīti), but
that it was known quite early in Ceylon is evidenced by the fact that, among the
scenes from the Buddha's life represented in the relic-chamber of the
Mahā-Thūpa, the conversion of Apalāla is mentioned (Mhv.Xxx.84). The Divyāvadāna
(pp.348, 385) makes reference to the story, and states that the nāga was
converted shortly before the Buddha's death. Hiouen Thsang gives the story in
detail (Beal.: Records of the Western World i.122; also Legge: Fa Hien's Travels,
p.29n.). During Kassapa Buddha's time, Apalāla had been a powerful man called
Gangi. By means of his charms he subdued the dragons that attacked the country,
and the people, in gratitude, agreed to give him tribute. Later some of them
forgot their promise and he, in wrath, became a dragon after his death.
The Buddha Gotama visited him and
preached to him. He was converted, but, for his sustenance, he was allowed to
have one gathering of the crops every twelve years. It is for this reason that
the White River (Subhavastu) overflows every twelfth year. The story is found in
the Sūtrālankāra and other Mahāyāna books. See Nariman: Sanskrit Buddhism,
pp.194, 274.
According to the Vinaya of the
Mūlla-Sarvāstivādins, the Buddha converted Apalāla during a visit to Kashmir in
the company of the Yaksa Vajrapānī (JA.1914, vol. iv.510).

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