-
Kammāsadamma, Kammāsadhamma (v.l. Kammasa°)
A township of the Kurūs. The
Buddha, during the course of his wanderings,
stayed there several times; the exact place of his residence is, however,
mentioned only once, namely the fire-hut of a brahmin of the
Bhāradvāja-gotta, where a grass mat was
spread for him by the brahmin. It was on this occasion, according to the
Māgandiya Sutta (M.i.501), that, after a
long discussion, Māgandiya was converted.
Several important discourses were preached at Kammāsadamma, among them being:
The Samyutta Nikāya (S.ii.107f) contains a discourse on handling experiences
by way of casual relations, and the Anguttara (A.v.29f ) a discourse on the ten
noble states (ariyavāsā), both preached at Kammāsadhamma.
Buddhaghosa (SA.ii.89) says that the people
there were full of wisdom and their food was nutritious; it was therefore a
compliment to their intellectual calibre that the Buddha should have preached
these suttas to them.
Even in Buddhaghosa's day the name of the township had two different
spellings, and two etymologies are suggested for the names (DA.ii.483). The
place was called Kammāsadamma because it was here that the man-eating ogre,
Kammāsapāda was tamed and civilized by the
Bodhisatta. (Kammāso ettha damito ti, Kammāsadamam-Kammāso ti Kammāsapādo
porisādo vuccati.)
The spelling Kammāsadhamma is explained on the ground that the people of the
Kuru country had a code of honour called the
Kuruvattadhamma; it was here that Kammāsa (already referred to) was converted
and made to accept this code, hence the name of the township. (Kururatthavāsīnam
kira kuruvattadhammo, tasmim Kanamāso jāto, tasmā tam thānam "Kammāso ettha
dhamme jāto" ti Kammāsadhammam ti vuccati.)
According to the Jātakas, there are two places of the same name, called
Cūlakammāsadamma and Mahākammāsadamma respectively, to distinguish one from the
other. Mahākammāsadamma, which was evidently the original place, was founded on
the spot where the porisāda of the
Mahāsutasoma Jātaka was tamed (J.v.411), while Cūlakammāsadamma was the name
given to the place where Jayaddisa
showed his prowess by his spiritual victory over the ogre in the
Jayaddisa Jātaka (J.v.35f).
In the Divyāvadāna (pp.515f), the place is called Kammāsadamya. It was the
residence of the nuns Nanduttarā and
Mittākālikā (ThigA.87, 89).

|