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Son of the Sākiyan Suppabuddha (maternal
uncle of the Buddha) and his wife
Amitā. He had a sister
Bhaddakaccānā, who married Prince
Siddhattha.
Mhv.ii.22; MT.136; DhA.iii.44. The Dulva (Rockhill, p.13) calls him the son
of Amitodana and brother of Ananda. This is supported by Mtu. (ii.69), which
says that after the Buddha's renunciation, Devadatta tried to tempt
Bhaddakaccānā. In one passage in the Vinaya (ii.189), Devadatta is spoken of
as Godhiputta. Does this mean that his mother's name was Godhī? The Sanskrit
books (e.g., Mtu) give several stories of his youth which show his malice.
When Siddhattha was about to show his skill in the arts, a white elephant was
being brought for him, and Devadatta, out of envy, killed it. The carcase
blocked the city gates till Siddhattha threw it outside. The Pāli Commentaries
(e.g., SA.i.62) say that Devadatta had the strength of five elephants. On
another occasion he quarrelled with Siddhattha, who protested against his
shooting a goose.
When the Buddha visited Kapilavatthu
after the Enlightenment and preached to the Sākiyans,
Devadatta was converted together with his friends
Ananda, Bhagu,
Kimbila, Bhaddiya,
Anuruddha, and their barber,
Upāli, and he sought the Buddha at
Anupiyā and entered the Order (Vin.ii.182).
During the rainy season that followed, Devadatta acquired the power of iddhi
possible to those who are yet of the world (puthujja-nika-iddhi) (Vin.ii.183;
for particulars see Rockhill, p.85). For some time he seems to have enjoyed
great honour in the Order, and in one passage he is mentioned in a list of
eleven of the chief Elders of all of whom the Buddha speaks in praise. (Ud.i.5.
Again in Vin.ii.189 Sāriputta is mentioned as
having gone about Rājagaha singing Devadatta's
praises; see also DhA.i.64f). Devadatta was later suspected of evil wishes
(E.g., S. ii.156). About eight years before the Buddha's death, Devadatta, eager
for gain and favour and jealous of the Buddha's fame, attempted to win over
Ajātasattu.
The following account is summarised from various passages in the books,
chiefly Vin.ii.184ff; iii.171f; 174f; iv.71; DhA.i.112ff; iii.154; A.iii.123,
402; ii.73; iv.160; J. i.113, 142, 185, 490; iv.37, 158; v.333ff; vi.129f., etc.
He assumed the form of a child having a girdle of snakes, and suddenly
appeared on Ajātasattu's lap, frightening him. He then resumed his own form, and
Ajātasattu, much impressed, paid him great honour and, it is said, visited him
morning and evening with five hundred chariots and sent him daily five hundred
dishes of food. (According to J. i.186, 508, Ajātasattu built for him a monastery
at Gayāsīsa and sent him, daily, five hundred
pots of three-year-flavoured rice and the choicest dishes. These meals were so
tempting that some of the Buddha's followers would go there to eat them and
return stealthily).

Devadatta and Ajātasattu
This encouraged Devadatta in his schemes, and he conceived the idea of taking
the Buddha's place as leader of the Sangha. As soon as this thought occurred to
him, his iddhi-power disappeared.
The Koliyan Kakudha, follower of
Moggallāna, reborn as a
manomaya-kāyikadeva, divined Devadatta's plan and informed Moggallāna. The
latter repeated the matter to the Buddha, but the Buddha said it was unnecessary
to discuss it as Devadatta would ultimately betray himself.
Sometime later, Devadatta went to the Buddha and suggested that the
leadership of the Order should be handed over to him in view of the Buddha's
approaching old age. The Buddha scorned the suggestion, saying, "Not even to
Sāriputta or Moggallāna would I hand over the Order, and would I then to thee,
vile one, to be vomited like spittle?" (Vin.ii.188. This incident is referred to
in the Abhayarājakumāra Sutta,
M.i.393). Devadatta showed great resentment and vowed vengeance. Thereupon, at
the Buddha's suggestion, a proclamation was issued to the Sangha that in
anything done by Devadatta in the name of the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha,
none but Devadatta was to be recognised.
It was at this time that Devadatta incited Ajātasattu to kill his father,
Bimbisāra, while he himself prepared to kill
the Buddha. (The Ap.ii.300f explains that all these plans of Devadatta to harm
the Buddha were the result of the Buddha's previous evil deeds).
Ajātasattu agreed, and provided Devadatta with royal archers to shoot the
Buddha. These were placed on different paths, one on one path, two on another,
and so on up to sixteen, and the plan was so laid that not one of them would
survive to tell the tale. But when the Buddha approached the first man, he was
terrified by the Buddha's majesty, and his body became stiff. The Buddha spoke
kindly to him, and the man, throwing away his weapons, confessed his intended
crime. The Buddha thereupon preached to him and, having converted him, sent him
back by a different path. The other groups of archers, tired of waiting, gave up
the vigil and went away one after the other. The different groups were led to
the Buddha by his iddhi-power, and he preached to them and converted them. The
first man returned to Devadatta saying that he was unable to kill the Buddha
because of his great iddhi-power.
Devadatta then decided to kill the Buddha himself. One day, when the Buddha
was walking on the slopes of Gijjhakūta, he
hurled down on him a great rock. Two peaks sprang up from the ground, thereby
arresting its rushing advance, but a splinter struck the Buddha's foot, causing
the blood to flow. Being in great pain, he was carried to
Maddakucchi, and from there to Jīvaka's
Ambavana, where Jīvaka attended him. After this
event, the monks wished the Buddha to have a guard, but this he refused, saying
that it was impossible for anyone to deprive a
Tathāgata of his life.
Devadatta's next attempt on the Buddha's life was to persuade
elephant-keepers to let loose a fierce elephant,
Nalāgiri (or Dhanapāla), drunk with toddy, on to the road by which the
Buddha would pass. The news spread rapidly, and the Buddha was warned, but
refused to turn back. As the elephant advanced he pervaded it with love, and
thus completely subdued it.
This outrage made Devadatta very unpopular, and even Ajātasattu was compelled
by the force of public opinion to withdraw his patronage from Devadatta, whose
gain and honour decreased. (Sp.iv.811. At this time,
Kokālika was very useful to Devadatta, J.
ii.438). Thereupon he decided, with the help of several others, Kokālika,
Katamoraka-tissa,
Khandadeviyāputta and
Samuddadatta, to bring about a schism in
the Order. These five went accordingly to the Buddha and asked for the
imposition of five rules on all members of the Sangha:
- (1) that monks should dwell all their lives in the forest,
- (2) that they should accept no invitations to meals, but live entirely on
alms obtained by begging,
- (3) that they should wear only robes made of discarded rags and accept no
robes from the laity,
- (4) that they should dwell at the foot of a tree and not under a roof,
- (5) that they should abstain completely from fish and flesh.
The Buddha's reply was that those who felt so inclined could follow these
rules - except that of sleeping under a tree during the rainy season - but he
refused to make the rules obligatory. This refusal delighted Devadatta, who went
about with his party, declaring that the Buddha was prone to luxury and
abundance. He was believed by the foolish, and in spite of the Buddha's warning
against the dire sin of causing schism in the Order, Devadatta informed Ananda
of his intention of holding an uposatha
meeting without the Buddha, and, having persuaded five hundred newly ordained
monks from Vesāli to join him, he went out to
Gayāsīsa. On this occasion he tried to imitate
the Buddha, keeping two chief disciples beside him (DhA.i.122). Three suttas,
the two Devadatta, and the
Mahāsāropama, were preached after this
event.
Among the followers of Devadatta were also some nuns, chief of whom was
Thullanandā, who never tired of singing his
praises (Vin.iv.66, 335). The mother of
Kumārakassapa, also, first entered the Order under Devadatta, but when he
denounced her, following the discovery of her pregnancy, she sought refuge with
the Buddha. Some of the Sākiyans, too, seem to have preferred Devadatta to the
Buddha - e.g., Dandapāni (MA.i.298).
The Buddha sent Sāriputta and Moggallāna to Gayāsīsa to bring back the
deluded ones. Devadatta, believing that they had come to join him, rejoiced,
and, in spite of Kokālika's warning, welcomed them. That night he preached very
late to the monks, and, wishing for rest, asked Sāriputta to address the
assembly. Sāriputta and Moggallāna preached to such effect that they persuaded
the five hundred monks to return with them. Kokālika kicked Devadatta on the
chest to awaken him and tell him the news. When Devadatta discovered what had
happened, hot blood came from his mouth, and for nine months he lay grievously
ill. (The Vinaya account omits the kicking, but it is mentioned in DhA.i.143 and
in J. i.491).
As his end drew near, he wished to see the Buddha, though the latter had
declared that it would not be possible in this life. Devadatta, however, started
the journey on a litter, but on reaching Jetavana, he stopped the litter on the
banks of the pond and stepped out to wash. The earth opened and he was swallowed
up in Avīci, where, after suffering for one hundred thousand kappas, he would be
reborn as a Pacceka Buddha called Atthissara. (The Saddharmapundarika (chap.xi.)
says he will be a Buddha named Devarāja). It is said (DhA.i.147; see also
Mil.108) that at the moment of being swallowed by the earth, Devadatta uttered a
stanza in which he declared that he had no refuge other than the Buddha. It is
this last act of Devadatta's which the Buddha had in view when he agreed to
ordain Devadatta. (He was one of five people who were swallowed by the earth in
the Buddha's time. Mil.101).
The Dhammapada Commentary contains a graphic account of the tortures of
Devadatta in Avīci. (DhA.i.147; also PSA.79. His
body in hell is one hundred leagues long). In previous births, also, he had been
swallowed by the earth, as King Kalābu and as
Mahāpatāpa. When the people heard of
Devadatta's death, they held a great festival, as they had done of yore at the
death of Pingala, who was an
incarnation of Devadatta (DhA.i.126f).
The Jātaka Commentary contains numerous stories showing that Devadatta's
enmity towards the Buddha was not confined to this life. It had existed during
many kappas, and though sometimes he was foiled in his attempts to harm the
Bodhisatta, in many cases he succeeded in working his will. The beginning of
this enmity, which increased with time, is described in the
Serivānija Jātaka.
One of the Milinda dilemmas (200ff) is as follows: "Why should Devadatta, who
was so wicked, have been, time after time, superior in power to the Bodhisatta?"
A list of such instances is given. Nāgasena's reply is that Devadatta did
several good deeds, such as protecting the poor, building bridges, etc.
Devadatta's wickedness and his hatred of the Bodhisatta are illustrated in
various Jātakas besides those already mentioned - e.g.,
- the Kakkara,
- the Kapi,
- the Kukkura,
- the Kurunga,
- the Kurunga-miga,
- the Khandahāla,
- the Godha,
- the Campeyya,
- the Cūla-Nandiya,
- the Chaddanta,
- the Tacchasūkara,
- the Tayodhamma,
- the Tittira,
- the Dummedha,
- the Dhammaddhaja,
- the Dhonasākha,
- the Pandara,
- the Bhūridatta,
- the Manicora,
- the Mahāummagga,
- the Mahākapi,
- the Mahā-Nāradakassapa,
- the Mahāpaduma,
- the Mahāsīlava,
- the Romaka,
- the Latukika,
- the Vānara,
- the Vānarinda,
- the Vessantara,
- the Saccankira,
- the Sattigumba,
- the Sāliya,
- the Sumsumāra,
- the Suvannakakkata.
In the Dhamma Jātaka, Devadatta is spoken of
as having been the very incarnation of unrighteousness, Adhamma. In several
stories his craftiness is emphasised - e.g.,
In the Kālabāhu Jātaka he is
represented as very envious, and his falsehood and duplicity are emphasised in
- the Cetiya,
- the Kakkāra and
- the Somanassa Jātakas.
His ingratitude is illustrated in such stories as those of
- the Anta,
- the Amba,
- the Asampadāna,
- the Upāhana,
- the Guttila,
- the Javasakuna,
- the Dūbhiya-makkata,
- the Nigrodha,
- the Mahākapi,
- the Ruru and
- the Sīlavanāga Jātakas,
while others, such as
- the Apannaka,
- the Ubhatobhattha,
- the Kandagalaka,
- the Kāsāva,
- the Giridanta,
- the Jambuka,
- the Jambukhādaka,
- the Parantapa,
- the Lakkhana,
- the Vinīlaka,
- the Virocana,
- the Vīraka,
- the Sabbadātha,
- the Sammuddavānija,
- the Sammodamāna Jātakas, speak of his folly and inefficiency.
It is stated (E.g.,Mil.410) that in spite of the great hatred shown by
Devadatta towards him, the Buddha did not harbour, on his part, one single
feeling of ill-will.
Only once is mention made (A.iv.402f ) of the text of a sermon by Devadatta.
Candikāputta reports this to Sāriputta,
who makes it an occasion for a talk to the monks.

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