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Cullakālinga Jātaka (No.301)
Kālinga, king of
Dantapura, anxious to make a fight, sent his
four daughters of surpassing beauty into every kingdom, offering them to any man
who would fight him for them. Assaka, king of
Potali, with the advice of his minister
Nandisena, accepted the challenge. Kālinga
thereupon came with his mighty army, and the Bodhisattva who was an ascetic
declared, after consultation with Sakka, that victory would be his. But
Nandisena, undaunted, instructed Assaka as to how he should kill the tutelary
deity of Kālinga when this deity, in the guise of a white bull, should appear on
the battlefield. Nandisena led the attack of the soldiers, the white bull was
killed and Kālinga defeated. He had to provide dowries for his daughters, and
thenceforth the two kings lived as friends.
The story was related in reference to
Sāriputta who is identified with Nandisena. Two Jains, a man and a woman,
each versed in five hundred theses, met in Vesāli and the Licchavis arranged a
marriage between them. They had one son, Saccaka,
and four daughters, Saccā,
Lolā, Avavādakā
and Patācarā. After the death of their parents,
the girls wandered from city to city for purposes of disputation. They came at
last to Sāvatthi, where they set up at the
city gate a jambu-tree, to be pulled up by anyone accepting their challenge to a
discussion. Sāriputta, seeing the branch, had it removed, and when the girls
came to him with a great crowd of people, answered all their questions and
defeated them in debate. There-upon they entered the Order under
Uppalavannā, and the fame of Sāriputta
increased. J. iii.1ff

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