|
The name of a country and its people (Maddā).
In the Kusa Jātaka, Kusa, son of
Okkāka, king of Kusāvatī in the Malla country, is
mentioned as having married Pabhāvatī, daughter of the king of Madda, and the
capital of the Madda king was Sāgala (J.v.283ff.;
Kusāvati was one hundred leagues from Sāgala (J.v.290), cp. Mtu.ii.441f).
In the similar story of Anitthigandha, a prince of Benares contracts a
marriage with a daughter of the king of Sāgala - his name being Maddava;
but the girl dies on the way to her husband. (SnA..i.68f.; cp. DhA.iii.281, about
the other Anitthigandha of Sāvatthi of the Buddha's days, who also married a
Madda princess).
The Chaddanta Jātaka also mentions a
matrimonial alliance between the royal houses of
Benares and Sāgala, while in the
Kālingabodhi Jātaka (J.iv.230f ) the Madda king’s daughter marries a prince
of Kālinga while both are in exile.
J.v.39f.; so also in the Mūgapakkha
Jātaka (J.vi.1), the wife of the Kāsi king was
the daughter of the king of Madda, Candadevi by name; while
Phusatī, wife of
Sañjaya of Jetuttara in the Sivi kingdom
and mother of Vessantara, was also a Madda princess (J.vi.480); likewise
Maddī, wife of
Vessantara.
Cūlani, son of
Talatā, also married a princess of Madda
(J.vi.471). According to the Mahāvamsa
(Mhv.viii.7; this probably refers to Madras and not to the Madda country, whose
capital was Sāgala), Sumitta, son of Sīhabāhu and king of Sīhapura, married the
daughter of the Madda king and had three sons by him, the youngest of whom,
Panduvāsudeva, became king of Ceylon.
Bhaddā Kāpilānī wife of
Pippalimānava (Mahā Kassapa), was the
daughter of a Kosiyagotta brahmin of Sāgala in
the Madda country. Men went there in search of a wife for him because it was
famed for the beauty of its women (Maddarattham nāma itthāgāro) (ThagA.iii.142;
ThigA.68). Anojā, wife of
Mahā Kappina of
Kukkutavatī, also came from the royal
household of Madda (DhA.ii.116), as did Khemā,
wife of Bimbisāra (ThigA.127).
The wife of a Cakka-vatti comes either from
Uttarakuru or from the royal family of Madda
(MA.ii.950; DA.ii.626; KhpA.173).
For the identification of Madda see Sāgala.

|