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One of the four sons of the Nāga-king
Dhatarattha and his queen Samuddajā, the others being Sudassana, Bhūridatta and
Subhaga. When Kānārittha heard that his mother was a human, wishing to test her
one day while drinking her milk, he assumed a serpent's form and struck her foot
with his tail. Samuddajā threw him on to the ground with a shriek and
accidentally struck his eye with her nail, thereby blinding him. Henceforth he,
whose name had been Arittha, was known as Kānārittha (J.vi.168). When, after
Bhūridatta's disappearance (see Bhūridatta Jātaka) from the Nāga-world, his
brothers set out to search for him, Kānārittha was sent to the world of the
gods, for he was so cruel by nature that they knew that if he went to the world
of men he would destroy it by fire (J.vi.190). When, after his search, he
returned to the Nāga-world, he was appointed doorkeeper of Bhūridatta's
sick-room; there, seeing Subhaga dragging a brahmin roughly into the Nāga-world,
he prevented him from ill-treating the man and told him of the greatness of all
brahmins, illustrating his words with various stories (J.vi.197; details see
pp.200ff). It is said that in his immediately preceding birth, he had been a
brahmin, well-versed in sacrificial lore. Bhūridatta heard (from his bed)
Arittha's undue praise of brahmins and refuted his statements (J.vi.205ff).
Kānārittha is identified with
Sunakkhatta (J.vi.219).

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