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1. Gandhāra. A Pacceka Buddha mentioned in a nominal list. M.iii.69;
ApA.i.106.
2. Gandhāra.One of the sixteen
Mahājanapadas (countries) (A.i.213; iv.252, etc.; in the Niddesa and
Mahāvastu lists Gandhāra is omitted and others substituted). Its capital was
Takkasilā, famous for its university; its king
in the time of the Buddha was Pukkusāti. There
was friendly intercourse between him and Bimbisāra
of Magadha. Merchants and visitors from one
country to another were lodged and fed at the expense of the country's king, and
no tariffs were levied on their merchandise. There was constant exchange of
goods and valuables, and on one occasion Bimbisāra, wishing to send his friend a
gift of particular value, dispatched to him a letter containing news of the
appearance in the world of the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha. When Pukkusāti
read the letter he decided to become a follower of the Buddha, and ordained
himself as a monk; then, leaving his kingdom, he travelled all the way to
Sāvatthi to see the Buddha (MA.ii.979ff). This conversion of Gandhāra's' king,
however, does not seem to have had the effect of converting the rest of its
people to the Buddha's faith. The memory of Pukkusāti was evidently soon
forgotten, for we find Moggaliputta
Tissa, at the conclusion of the Third Council, sending the Thera Majjhantika
to convert Gandhāra (Mhv.Xii.3ff).

Typical Ghandhara Buddha in Greek influenced style.
According to Buddhaghosa's account,
Pukkusāti's kingdom was over one hundred leagues in extent (MA.ii.988), and the
distance from Takkasilā to Sāvatthi was one hundred and ninety-two leagues
(MA.ii.987; from Benares it was one hundred and
twenty leagues, vīsamyo-janasata; J. i.395; ii.47). There was evidently a
well-known caravan route linking the two countries, although Gandhāra was
regarded as a paccantima janapada. (MA.ii.982; there was also constant trade
between Gandhāra and Videha, J. iii.365ff. It
would appear from the Mahā Niddesa i.154 that Takkasilā was a regular centre of
trade).
At the time of Majjhantika's visit, the people of Gandhāra were being
harassed by the Nāga-king Aravāla, and the
chronicles contain details of his conversion by the monk. The Nāga-king,
together with his retinue, the yakkha Pandaka and his wife Hāritā, became devout
followers of the Buddha. Majjhantika preached the
Āsīvisūpama Sutta, and many thousands
joined the Order. (Mhv.Xii.9ff; Smp.i.64f; Dpv. viii.4).
Gandhāra appears to have included Kasmīra, the two countries being always
mentioned together as Kasmīra-Gandhāra. They occupied the sites of the modern
districts of Peshawar and Rawalpindi in the northern Punjab (PHAI. p.93). In the
time of Asoka the country formed part of his
empire, and is mentioned as such in Rock Edict V. Before that it was subject to
the Achaemenid kings. Gandhāra was always famous for its red woollen shawls (kambala)
(SnA..ii.487; J. vi.501).
Another king of Takkasilā besides Pukkusāti is mentioned - namely, Naggaji,
who was a contemporary of Nimi, king of Videha. (J.iii.377; cf. Ait. Brāhmana
vii.34; Sat. Brāhmana viii.1, 4, 10; see also Gandhārarājā).
One of the eye teeth of the Buddha was deposited in Gandhāra (Bu.xxviii.6;
D.ii.167).

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