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The name of a tribe and a country, the capital of which was
Sumsumāragiri.
The Buddha went there several times in the course of his wanderings (e.g.,
A.ii.61, A.iv.85, etc.; Vin.ii.127; iv. 115, 198) and three rules for the monks
were laid down there (Vin.v.145).
Bodhi-rājakumāra (1), son of
Udena of Kosambī, lived there, apparently
as his father's viceroy, in which case the Bhaggā were subject to Kosambī. The
C.H.I. (i.175) says that the Bhaggā were members of the
Vajjian confederacy.
The Bhagga country lay between Vesāli and
Sāvatthi.
It was while sojourning in the Bhagga country that
Moggallāna was attacked by
Māra entering into his stomach (M.i.332), and it
was there that he preached the Anumāna Sutta
(M.i.95). Sirimanda and the parents of
Nakula were inhabitants of the Bhagga country, and
Sigālapitā (ThagA.ii.70) went there in
order to meditate; there he became an arahant.
In the Apadāna (Ap.ii.359) the Bhaggā are mentioned with the Kārusā.

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