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1. Assaka. A king mentioned in the
Nimi Jātaka, in a list of kings, such as Dudīpa, Sāgara, Sela, etc., who, in
spite of all their great sacrifices, were not able to go beyond the Peta-world.
J.vi.99.
2. Assaka.King of Potali in the
kingdom of Kāsi. His queen consort
Ubbarī was very dear to him, and when she died he
was plunged into grief. He put her corpse in a coffin, placed it under his bed
and lay thereon, starving for seven days. The Bodhisatta was then an ascetic in
the Himālaya, and just at this time he visited Potali. There, in the royal park,
the king came to see him because he was told that the ascetic would show him
Ubbarī. The Bodhisatta showed him Ubbarī now reborn as a dung-worm in the park,
because, being intoxicated with her own beauty, she had done no good deeds.
Seeing the king incredulous, the ascetic made her speak, and she declared that
she cared much more for the dung-worm, who was now her mate, than for Assaka who
had been her husband in her previous life. Assaka went back to the palace, had
the body disposed of, married another queen and lived righteously. J. ii.155-8.
3. Assaka.King of Potanagara in the Assaka country, soon after the
Buddha's death. He was the father of Sujāta and had two wives. He bequeathed his
kingdom to the son of the younger wife (VvA.259-60).
See also Aruna (2).
4. Assaka. The country of Assaka is one of the sixteen
Mahājanapadas mentioned in the Anguttara
Nikāya (A.i.213; iv.252, 256, 260). It does not, however; occur in the list of
twelve countries given in the Janavasabha Sutta.
The Assakas are said to have had settlements on the
Godāvarī, and
Bāvarī's hermitage (Sn.v.977) was in their territory, in close proximity to
the Alaka or Mulaka (the district round Paithan) Law, Early Geography, 21).
The country is mentioned with Avanti (J.v.317) in
the same way as Anga with
Magadha, and its position in the list between
Sūrasena and Avanti makes it probable that when the
list was drawn up, its position was immediately to the north-west of Avanti. It
is probable, in that case, that the Godāvarī settlement, in the
Dakkhināpatha, was a later colony.
In the Assaka Jātaka (J.ii.155) mention is
made of a king Assaka whose realm was in the kingdom of Kāsī. It is significant,
in this connection, that the capital of Assaka, variously called Potana (E.g.,
D.ii.235; J. iii.3) or Potali (E.g., J. ii.155), is not mentioned in the reference
to the Godāvarī.
According to the Culla Kālinga
Jātaka (J.iii.3-5), at one time the King of Assaka (Arum) accepted the
challenge of King Kālinga of
Dantapura to war, and defeated him. Later
Assaka married Kālinga's daughter and the relations between the two countries
were amicable. In the Hāthigumphā Inscription of Khāravela it is related that
Khāravela, regardless of King Sātakarnī, sent a large army to the west (pachime
disam) to strike terror into Assaka (or Asika) nagara. Law (Op.cit., p.21)
thinks that the Assaka of the Culla Kālinga Jātaka, the Asikanagara of the
Hāthigumphā Inscription and the Assaka of the Sutta Nipāta are one and the same
place. This would probably be correct if Potana and Potali were regarded as two
different cities, capitals of two different settlements having the same name.
Sanskrit authors speak of both Asmakā and Asvakā. It is not possible to say
whether these represent two distinct tribes or whether they are variant names
for the same people. Asanga mentions Asmaka in his Sūtrālankāra as a territory
on the basin of the Indus. This would make it identical with the Assakenus of
Greek writers, that is to the east of the Sarasvati, about twenty-five miles
from the sea on the Swat valley. Pānini mentions the Asmakas (iv.173). The
Mārkandeya Purāna and the Brhat Samhitā place Assaka to the north-west. The
Assaka capital, Potana, it has been suggested, is the Paudanya of the
Mahābhārata (i.77, 47). In the Commentary to Kautilya's Arthasāsta, Bhattasvāmi
identifies Asmaka with Mahārāstra Law, op. cit., 22).
Soon after the Buddha's death, a King Assaka was the ruler of Potali, and he
and his son Sūjata were converted by Mahā Kaccānā (VvA.259-67).
In the time of King Renu, the Assaka king of Potana was Brahmadatta
(D.ii.236).
In the Buddha's time the Assaka king is described as an Andhakarājā. He took
a thousand for the plot of land sold for Bāvarī's hermitage (SnA.ii.581).

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