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Tacchasūkara Jātaka (No.492)
Once a carpenter in a village near Benares picked up a young boar from a pit
and took him home and reared him, calling him Tacchasūkara (Carpenter's Boar).
The boar helped him in his work, fetching his tools and so on. When he grew up
to be a big, burly beast, the carpenter let him go free in the forest. There he
joined a herd of wild boars which was being harassed by a fierce tiger.
Tacchasūkara made all the preparations for a counter-attack, digging pits and
training all the members of the herd in their various duties, and their several
positions at the time of attack. Under his guidance they succeeded in killing
the tiger and greedily devouring the corpse. Tacchasūkara was told that there
was a sham ascetic who had helped the tiger to eat the boars. The herd attacked
the ascetic, who climbed up a fig-tree, but they uprooted the tree and devoured
him. They consecrated Tacchasūkara as their king, making him sit on a fig-tree,
and sprinkling water on him from a conch-shell, with its spirals turned
right-wise, which the ascetic had used for drinking.
Hence arose the custom of seating the king on a chair of fig wood and
sprinkling him with water from a conch-shell at his coronation. The story was
related in connection with the Thera
Dhanuggahatissa. Spies of Pasenadi had
heard him discuss with the Thera Datta the plan of campaign which should be
adopted if Pasenadi wished to defeat Ajātasattu.
This was repeated to Pasenadi, who followed the suggestion and captured
Ajātasattu.
Dhanuggahatissa is identified with Tacchasūkara. J. iv.342ff.

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