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The Buddha meditation hermitage = Kuti on the Vultures Peak:
One of the five hills encircling
Rājagaha. It was evidently a favourite resort of those who followed the
religious life. (It was so even in times gone by, see, e.g., J. ii.55).

The Buddha seems to have been attracted
by its solitude, and is mentioned as having visited it on several occasions,
sometimes even in the dark, in drizzling rain, while Māra made unsuccessful
attempts to frighten him (S.i.109).
It was on the
slopes of Gijjhakūta, where the Buddha was wandering about, that
Devadatta
hurled at him a mighty stone to kill him, but only a splinter injured his foot
(Vin.ii.193, etc.).
It was there also that Jīvaka Komāra-bhacca administered a
purgative to the Buddha (AA.i.216).

Among those who visited the Buddha on Gijjhakūta are mentioned:
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Sahampati (S.i.153),
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the youth Māgha (Sn., p.86),
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the Yakkha Inda (S.i.206),
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Sakka (S.i.233; iv.102),
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the Paribbājaka Sajjha
(A.iv.371),
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the Kassapagotta monk (A.i.237),
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Pañcasikha (S.iv.103; D.ii.220),
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Sutavā (A.iv.369),
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the four kings of the Cātummahārājika world and their
followers (D.iii.195),
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Abhayarājakumāra (S.v.126),
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Upaka Mandikāputta
(A.ii.181),
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Dhammika (A.iii.368), and
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Vassakāra (A.iv.18; D.ii.72).

Several
well-known suttas were preached on Gijjhakūta - e.g., the
Māgha, Dhammika and
Chalabhijāti Suttas, the discourse on the seven
Aparihānīyadhammā (A.iv.21f.),
the Mahāsāropama and
Ātānātiya Suttas. (See also S. ii.155, 185, 190, 241;
iii.121; A.ii.73; iii.21; iv.160).
It is said (AA.i.412) that in due course a
vihāra was erected on Gijjhakūta for the Buddha and his monks; here cells were
erected for the use of monks who came from afar, but these cells were so
difficult of access that monks arriving late at Rājagaha would ask
Dabbamallaputta-Tissa to find accommodation for them in Gijjhakūta, in order to
test his capabilities (Vin.ii.76; DhA.iii.321f).
Mention is made of several
eminent monks who stayed at Gijjhakūta from time to time - e.g.,

Channa fell ill there, and ultimately committed suicide. (Another
monk is mentioned as having thrown himself down from Gijjhakūta because he was
discontented with his life, Vin.iii.82. According to one account, AA.i.146f,
Vakkali, too, committed suicide by throwing himself from Gijjhakūta; but see
Vakkali).
Moggallāna and
Lakkhana are reported to
have stayed there, and to have seen many inhabitants of Rājagaha reborn in
Gijjhakūta as petas (S.ii.254; Vin.iii.104; for Moggallāna see also A.iv.75).

The Mettiya-bhummajakas (Vin.iii.167) and the
Chabbaggiyas (ibid., 82) were also
in the habit of visiting the hill.
Several places are mentioned as having
been visited by the Buddha during his sojourns on Gijjhakūta, and it may be
inferred from accounts given of these visits that these places were within easy
reach of the hill. Such, for example, are:
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the Patibhānakūta (S.v.448),
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the Sītavana, where the Buddha went to visit
Sona (A.iii.374),
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the river Sappinī, on
the banks of which lived various Paribbājakas, including
Sarabha (A.i.185;
ii.29, 176),
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the Paribbājakārama of Udumbarikā,
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the residence of Nigrodha, near
the Moranivāpa on the bank of the lake Sumāgadhā (D.iii.39), and
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the park Maddakucchi, where the Buddha was removed after the injury to his foot
(DhA.ii.164).
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The Sūkara-khatalena was on the slope of Gijjhakūta, and there the
Buddha was once visited by Dīghanakha (S.v.233; M.i.497).
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Jīvaka's mango-grove
lay between Gijjhakūta and the walls of Rājagaha (DA.i.150).
The Gijjhakūta was so called, either
because its peak was like a vulture's beak, or because it was the resort of many
vultures (SnA..ii.417; AA.i.412; MA.i.291, etc).

Cunningham (CAGI.534), on the authority
of both Fa Hien and Hiouen Thsang, identifies Gijjhakūta with the modern
Sailagiri, about two and a half miles to the north-east of the old town. It is
also called Giriyek Hill. Gijjhakūta is sometimes referred to as Gijjhapabbata
(J.ii.50; iii.255, 484) and as Gijjha. J. vi.204, 212.
2. Gijjhakūta. A tank in Ceylon,
built by Upatissa II. Cv.xxxvii.185.

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