|
A primeval king, descended from Mahāsammata,
Roja,
Vararoja, Kalyāna,
Varakalyāna and Uposatha, the last named being his father. He
was thus an ancestor of the Sākiyans. J. ii.311; iii.454; Mtu.ii.2; Dpv. iii.5; but
see SnA.i.352, where the genealogy is slightly different.
He had the seven Jewels of a Cakka-vatti and his four
Supernatural Powers. When he clenched his left hand and touched it with his
right, a shower of the seven kinds of jewels fell knee deep from the sky. For
eighty four thousand years he was a prince, for eighty four thousand a viceroy,
and for eighty four thousand more a king. His life span was an asankheyya. But
he grew discontented, and, at the suggestion of his ministers, visited the deva
world. First he went to the Cātummahārājika world, where he ruled; but still
unsatisfied, he went to Tāvatimsa. There
Sakka welcomed him and gave him half
his kingdom. Mandhātā ruled there during the lifetime of thirty six Sakkas, each
Sakka's life lasting for thirty six million years and sixty times one hundred
thousand. As time went on, Mandhātā's craving increased; he wished to kill Sakka
and gain the whole kingdom. Because of his greed his power waned, and he fell
from heaven into his park. The gardener announced his arrival to the royal
family, and they provided a resting place for him and there he lay dying. When
asked for a message for his people, he wished them to know how even he, in spite
of his great pomp and power, had to die (J.ii.311ff.; DA.ii.481f.; MA.i.182f.;
cp. Dvy.210ff).
Mandhātā is identified with the Bodhisatta (J.ii.314). His
son was Varamandhātā, whose son was
Cara and grandson Upacara (or
Apacara)
(J.iii.454; Dpv. iii.6). Mandhātā ruled at Rājagaha (SnA..ii.413; DA.i.132), and
is named as one of the four persons who attained, while yet in their earthly
bodies, to the glory of the gods. Mil. 115, 291; MA.ii.737f.; the others being
Guttila, Sādhīna and
Nimi.
He is considered as chief of those given up to the
pleasures of the senses and as an example of one whose desires could never be
satisfied. A.ii.17; AA.ii.474; e.g., VibhA.506. Thig.486.
When Mandhātā went to the deva world he was accompanied by
inhabitants of all the four continents. After his return to earth, however, the
Cakkaratana, stuck fast in the ground, and the others could not return to their
homes. They thereupon begged for the intervention of the minister (Parināyaka),
who was carrying on the government with Mandhātā's shoes on the throne. He gave
them lands in Jambudīpa. There those who came from Pubba Videha called their
land Videharattha; those from Apara goyāna called it Aparantajanapada, and those
from Uttarakuru dwelt in what afterwards came to be known as Kururattha.
DA.ii.482; MA.i.183f.

|