|
A town in Kosala. It was regarded in the
Buddha's time as one of the six great cities of India, the others being
Campā, Rājagaha,
Sāvatthi, Kosambī
and Benares (D.ii.146). It was probably the
older capital of Kosala, and is mentioned as such in the
Nandiyamiga Jātaka. J. iii.270; cf.
Mtu.i.348, 349, 350, where it is called the capital of King Sujāta of the
Sākiyan race. See also the Kumbha Jātaka
(J.ii.13), where Sāketa is mentioned as one of the places into which alcohol was
introduced quite soon after its discovery by Sura and
Varuna. According to the
Mahānārada Kassapa Jātaka
(J.vi.228), it was the birthplace of Bijaka, aeons
ago. In this context it is called Sāketā. According to a tradition, recorded in
the Mahāvastu, Sāketa was the city from which Sākiyan princes were exiled when
they founded Kapilavatthu. E. J. Thomas
accepts this view (op. cit., 16f.).
The Dhammapada Commentary (DhA.i.386), however, states that the city was
founded in the Buddha's time by Dhanañjaya,
father of Visākhā, when, at the special
invitation of Pasenadi, he went from
Rājagaha to live in
Kosala. On the way to Sāvatthi with Pasenadi,
Dhañanjaya pitched his camp for the night, and learning from the king that the
site of the camp was in Kosalan territory and seven leagues from Sāvatthi,
Dhanañjaya obtained the king's permission to found a city there. And because the
site was first inhabited in the evening (sāyam), the city came to be called
Sāketa. The Divyāvadāna (211) has another explanation of the name, in connection
with the coronation of Mandhātā (Svayam Āgatam svayam Āgatam Sāketa Sāketam iti
sañjnā samvrttā).
The reference is probably to a new settlement established by Dhanañjaya in
the old city.
We also learn from the Visuddhimagga
(p.390; but see below) that the distance from Sāketa to Sāvatthi was seven
leagues (yojanas), and there we are told that when the Buddha, at the invitation
of Cūla Subhaddā, went from Sāvatthi to
Sāketa, he resolved that the citizens of the two cities should be able to see
each other. In the older books (E.g., Vin.i.253) however, the distance is given
as six leagues. The town lay on the direct route between Sāvatthi and
Patitthāna, and is mentioned (Sn.vss.1011
1013) as the first stopping place out of Sāvatthi. The distance between the two
places could be covered in one day, with seven relays of horses (M.i.149), but
the books contain several references (E.g., Vin.i.88, 89, 270; iii.212; iv. 63,
120) to the dangers of the journey when undertaken on foot. The road was
infested with robbers, and the king had to maintain soldiers to protect
travellers.
Midway between Sāketa and Sāvatthi was
Toranavatthu, and it is said (S.iv.374 ff) that, when Pasenadi went from the
capital to Sāketa, he spent a night in Toranavatthu, where be visited
Khemā Therī who lived there. Between Sāketa and
Sāvatthi was a broad river which could be crossed only by boat (Vin.iv.65, 228).
Near Sāketa was the Añjanavana, where the
Buddha sometimes stayed during his visits to Sāketa and where he had several
discussions - e.g., with Kakudha
(S.i.54), Mendasira (q.v.), and
Kundaliya (S.v.73; see also
Kālaka Sutta and
Jarā Sutta and Sāketa Sutta).
On other occasions he stayed at the
Kālakārāma (A.ii.24) gifted to the Order by
Kālaka (q.v.), and the Tikantakivana
(A.iii.169), both of which were evidently near the city.
Mention is also made (E.g., S. v.174, 298 f.; for Sāriputta, see also
Vin.i.289) of Sāriputta,
Moggallāna and
Anuruddha staying together in
Sāketa;
Bhaddākāpilāni (Vin.iv.292) also stayed there, so did
Ananda. Once when Ananda was staying in the
Migadāya in the Anjanavana, a nun, described
as Jatilagāhikā (probably a follower of the
Jatilas), visited him and questioned him regarding concentration. A.iv.427.
Among others who lived in Sāketa were
Jambugāmikaputta, Gavampati,
Mendasira, Uttara,
Madhuvāsettha and his son
Mahānāga, and
Visākhā. Bhūta Thera was born in a suburb of
Sāketa.
Buddhaghosa says (SnA..ii.532 f.; cf.
DhA.iii.317f. and Saketa Jātaka) that there
lived at Sāketa a brahmin and his wife who, in five hundred lives, had been the
parents of the Buddha. When the Buddha visited Sāketa they met him, and, owing
to their fondness for him, came to be called Buddhapitā and Buddhamātā, their
family being called Buddhakula.
According to some accounts (E.g., AA.ii.482; but see
Cūla-Subhaddā),
Anāthapindika’s daughter, Cūla-Subhaddā,
was married to the son of Kālaka, a setthi of
Sāketa. Kālaka was a follower of the Niganthas,
but he allowed Subhaddā to invite the Buddha to a meal. She did this by
scattering eight handfuls of jasmine-flowers into the air from her balcony. The
Buddha read her thoughts, and went to Sāketa the next day with five hundred
arahants. At Sakka's request, Vessavana (Vissakamma?) provided gabled chambers
in which the Buddha and his monks travelled by air to Sāketa. At the end of the
meal, the Buddha preached to Kālakasetthi, who became a sotāpanna, and gave the
Kālakārāma for the use of the monks.
The Vinaya (Vin.i.270f) mentions another setthi of Sāketa. His wife had
suffered for seven years from a disease of the head, and even skilled physicians
failed to cure her. Jīvaka, on his way to Rājagaha, after finishing his studies
in Takkasilā, visited Sāketa, heard of her illness, and offered to cure her. At
first the setthi was sceptic, but in the end allowed Jīvaka to attend on his
wife. Jīvaka cured her by the administration of ghee through the nose, and, as
reward, received sixteen thousand kahāpanas from her and her various kinsmen.
Sāketa, is supposed to be identical with Ayojjhā (CAGI. 405), but as both
cities are mentioned in the Buddha's time, they are probably distinct. Rhys
Davids thinks that possibly they adjoined each other "like London and
Westminster" (Bud. India, p. 39. See also Sāketa Sutta, Sāketa Jātaka,
Sāketapañha). The site of Sāketa has been identified with the ruins of Sujān Kot,
on the Sai River, in the Unao district of the modern province of Oudh. The river
referred to is probably the Sarayū, which flows into the Gharghara, a tributary
of the Ganges.

|