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The name given to a portion of the
Vinaya Pitaka. This is generally further divided into two parts,
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the Mahāvagga
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the Cullavagga
It contains an attempt to give a coherent picture of the
whole legal life of the Sangha, with detailed and connected accounts of the
admission thereto, the ceremony of the uposatha, the annually recurring
observances connected with the rainy season, etc. An account is given, in the
case of each regulation, of the occasion on which it was formulated by the
Buddha. The separate chapters are arranged in chronological order, and are
intended to present a connected account of ecclesiastical history from the time
of the Enlightenment of the Buddha down to that of the Second Council, convened
one hundred years after the death of the Buddha. (See Oldenberg, Vinaya Pitaka
I., Introd., xxii.f.; Law, Pāli Lit., i.14f).
In many ways the Khandhakā, resemble the
Sutta Vibhanga of the Vinaya, but while in the case of the Vibhanga the stories
were added later to an original basis of regulations, the Pātimokkha, in that of
the Khandhakā the regulations and the stories were contemporary.
The Khandhakas consist of eighty
bhānavāras (DA.i.13), and are divided into twenty-two chapters, ten in the
Mahāvagga and twelve in the Cullavagga. Each chapter is called a khandhaka.
Thus, the first chapter is the Mahākhandaka; the second, the Uposathakhandhaka,
and so on.

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