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1. Gotamaka. A class of ascetics,
enumerated in a list of such classes. (A.iii.276. Does deva-dhammikā in
Ap.ii.358 (vs.11) qualify Gotamā?) Rhys Davids thinks they were almost certainly
the followers of some other member of the Sākiyan clan, as distinct from the
Buddha, and suggests that it might have been Devadatta or possibly a brahmin of
the Gotamagotta. (Dial.i.222; but see his article on Buddhist Law in ERE.; see
also Brethren 265, n.3). The Lalita-vistara (p.492), however, speaks of the
Gautamas in a list of nine such sects; the Gotamakas and the Gautamas are
evidently identical, as several of the other classes correspond with the Pāli.
According to the Lalita-vistara, these sects existed even before the Buddha, for
they are represented as meeting and addressing him in the sixth week after the
Enlightenment, on his way to the Ajapāla-tree. We hear no more of them in
subsequent history.
2. Gotamaka. A yakkba. See
Gotamakacetiya.
3. Gotamaka. See Kanha-Gotamaka.

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