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1. Kisāgotamī Therī. An arahant. She was
declared chief among women disciples with respect to the wearing of coarse robes
(lūkhacīvara-dharānam) (A.i.25; the DhA.iv.156 contains a story of the Buddha
speaking to Sakka the praises of Kisāgotamī). She came from a poor family in
Sāvatthi (of a setthikula, which had fallen on evil days, says the Apadāna
p.565, vs.19). Gotamī was her name - she was called Kisā because of her
thinness. She was married into a rich family, by whom she was disdainfully
treated; but as soon as she bore a son she was shown respect.
(Except by her husband says the Apadāna
loc. cit.20. The DhA.ii.270ff account, however, makes no mention of her ill
treatment; on the contrary, it leads us to expect that she should have been
greatly esteemed because, prior to her arrival, her father-in-law's wealth,
forty crores in amount, had all turned into charcoal. When she touched the
charcoal it once more became gold. This account is found also in SA.i.149).
The boy, however, died when just old
enough to run about; his mother, distraught with grief, fearful lest the dead
child should be taken from her, went about with him on her hip, seeking medicine
to revive his life. People laughed at her, until one wise man, realizing her
condition, directed her to the Buddha. The Buddha asked her to bring him a
mustard seed from a house where no one had yet died. In the course of her search
for the impossible her frenzy left her, and having grasped the truth, she laid
the child in the charnel field, and returning to the Master begged admission to
the Order. She became a Sotāpanna, and soon after, when her insight was
developed, the Buddha appeared before her in a blaze of radiance and, listening
to his words, she became an arahant. (ThigA.174ff; Ap.ii.564f; DhA.i.270ff;
AA.i.205).
In the verses ascribed to her in the
Therīgāthā (vv.213-23), she incorporates the story of Patācārā in her own psalm,
as though to utter more fully the pageant and tragedy inherent in woman's lot,
whereof her own sorrow was but a phase.
In the time of Padumuttara Buddha she
was a householder's daughter in Hamsavatī, and having heard the Buddha assign to
a bhikkhunī the foremost rank among wearers of coarse robes, she vowed that one
day the same rank should be her's.
In the time of Kassapa Buddha she was
the fifth daughter of Kikī and her name was Dhammā. Then she entered the Order
and lived a celibate life (Ap.ii.564f; ThigA.190f). She is identified with the
lizard in the Tittira Jātaka (J.iii.543).
The Samyutta Nikāya (i.129f) records a
visit paid to her by Māra as she sat resting in Andhavana. He was forced to
retire discomfited.
2. Kisāgotamī. A Khattiya-maiden of
Kapilavatthu. She saw from her balcony Siddhattha Gotama returning in his
chariot to his palace on receipt of the news that a son had been born to him.
Gotamī was gladdened by the sight of him, and gave vent to her exultation in the
famous "nibbutā-pada" (nibuttā nūna sā mātā, etc.).
Gotama was pleased by the mention of the
word nibbuta, which to him meant deliverance, and as a mark of his gratitude
sent her the necklace of pearls which he wore, worth one hundred thousand. She
accepted it gladly as a token of his love (J.i.60f; BuA.232f). She is sometimes
spoken of as a cousin of Gotama, his father's brother's daughter (pitucchādhītā).
(E.g., DhA.i.70; DhSA.34. A parallel has been drawn between this story and that
of Luke xi.27).
3. Kisāgotamī. Wife of the Buddha Phussa
in his last lay life. Their son was Ananda. Bu.xix.16.
4. Kisāgotamī. One of the chief women
supporters of the Buddha Tissa. Bu.xviii.23.

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