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1. Ekarāja.King of Benares. He was the
Bodhisatta. A minister, whom he expelled on the ground of misconduct in the
royal harem, took service under Dabbasena, king of
Kosala, and incited him to
make war on Ekarāja. The latter was captured while sitting on the dais in the
midst of his councillors and hanged head downwards by a cord from the lintel of
a door. In this position Ekarāja cultivated thoughts of loving-kindness towards
his enemy and attained a stage of complete absorption in mystic meditation. His
bonds burst and he sat cross-legged in mid air. Dabbasena was, meanwhile, seized
with a burning pain in his body and, on the advice of his courtiers, had Ekarāja
released, whereupon the pains disappeared. Realising Ekarāja's holiness,
Dabbasena restored the kingdom to him and asked his forgiveness (J.iii.13-15).
In the
Ekarāja Jātaka, reference is made
to the Mahāsīlava Jātaka for details regarding the expulsion of the
minister for misconduct and of the subsequent events. But there the king is
called Sīlava and not Ekarāja. The two stories contain certain similarities but
the details vary very much. See also the Seyya Jātaka, where the king is called
Kamsa, and compare it with the
Ghata
Jātaka. The Ekarāja Jātaka is given as an example of a birth in which the
Bodhisatta practised mettā to perfection (E.g., BuA.51; Mbv.11). The story of
Ekarāja is the last in the Cariyā-Pitaka (No. xiv).
According to the Cariyā
Pitaka Commentary (p.205), Ekarāja was a title given to the king on account of
his great power, in which case his real name might have been Sīlava, as
mentioned above. The scholiast on the Ekarāja Jātaka (J.iii.14), however, says
that Ekarāja was the king's personal name.
2. Ekarāja.King of Pupphavatī
(Benares). He was the son of Vasavatti and the father of
Candakumāra. For his
story see the Khandahāla Jātaka (J.vi.131ff). He belonged to the
Kondaññagotta
(J.vi.137).

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