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Kāpathika (v.l. Kāpatika)
A young brahmin, sixteen years old, well versed in the Vedas, and with his
head shaven. He was "of good stock, well informed, a good speaker and a scholar
of ability." He visited the Buddha at
Opasāda, where he interrupted a conversation
which the Buddha was holding with some aged brahmins; they rebuked him for
interrupting his elders, but Cankī, who happened
to arrive at that moment, interceded on his behalf. The Buddha, knowing that
Kāpathika had questions to ask of him, gave him an opportunity for so doing, and
there followed a discussion on various points, detailed in the
Cankī Sutta. At the end of the discussion the
youth declared himself a disciple of the Buddha (M.ii.168ff).
In the Sutta the Buddha addresses Kāpathika as Bhāradvāja, perhaps because he
belonged to that gotta.

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