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Kālingabodhi Jātaka (No.479)
The Kālinga king of
Dantapura had two sons, Mahā Kālinga and Culla Kālinga. Soothsayers foretold
that the younger would be an ascetic, but that his son would be a
Cakka-vatti. Knowing of this prophecy, Culla
Kālinga became so arrogant that Mahā Kālinga, on coming to the throne, ordered
his arrest. But Culla Kālinga fled to Himavā and lived there as an ascetic. Near
his hermitage lived the king and queen of Madda
who had fled with their daughter from their city of
Sāgala. Soothsayers had predicted that the princess's son would be a
Cakka-vatti, and all the kings of Jambudīpa
sought her hand. Her parents, not wishing to incur the enmity of any of the
kings, fled with her from the city. One day a wreath of mango-flowers which the
princess dropped into the river was picked up by Culla Kālinga, who thereupon
went in search of her. With her parents' consent he married her, and to these
two was born a son whom they called Kālinga.
When the stars revealed that Mahā Kālinga had died, Kālinga was sent to
Dantapura, to a courtier who had been an ally of Culla Kālinga. The prince's
identity having been duly established, he was crowned king, and his chaplain,
Kālinga-bhāradvāja, taught him the duties of a Cakka-vatti. On the fifteenth day
after his coronation, the tokens of a Cakka-vatti king appeared before him. (For
details see J. iv.232). One day while riding through the air with his retinue, he
came to the Bodhi-tree under which Buddhas attain Enlightenment, and though he
prodded his elephant until it died the animal found it impossible to fly over
the spot. The royal chaplain investigated matters and reported his finding to
the king who, having learnt from the chaplain of a Buddha's virtues, paid great
honour to the tree for seven days. See also
Samanakolañña.
Kālinga is identified with Ananda and
Kālinga-bhāradvāja with the Bodhisatta.
The story was related in reference to the Bodhi-tree planted, at Ananda's
suggestion, by Anāthapindika, at the
entrance to Jetavana, in order that people might
worship it while the Buddha was away on tour. As soon as a seedling was planted
from the great Bodhi-tree at Gayā, it grew into a tree fifty cubits high, and
the Buddha consecrated it by spending one night under it, wrapt in meditation
(J.iv.228-36).
The Kālingabodhi Jātaka is found also in the
Mahābodhi-vamsa (Mbv.62ff ); there it
is given in much greater detail and differs in minor details from the Jātaka
version, containing, among other things, a long description of dibba-cakkhu and
the seven gems of a Cakka-vatti.

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