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1. Uppalavannā Therī. One of the two chief women disciples of the
Buddha. She was born in
Sāvatthi as the daughter of a banker, and she
received the name of Uppalavannā because her skin was the colour of the heart of
the blue lotus. When she was come of age, kings and commoners from the whole of
India sent messengers to her father, asking for her hand. He, not wishing to
offend any of them, suggested that Uppalavannā should leave the world. Because
of her upanissaya, she very willingly agreed and was ordained a nun. Soon it
came to her turn to perform certain services in the uposatha-hall. Lighting the
lamp, she swept the room. Taking the flame of the lamp as her visible object,
she developed tejo-kasina and, attaining to jhāna, became an arahant possessed
of the four special attainments (patisambhidā). She became particularly versed
in the mystic potency of transformation (iddhivikubbana). When the Buddha
arrived at the Gandamba-tree to perform the
Twin Miracle, Uppalavannā offered to
perform certain miracles herself, if the Buddha would give his consent, but this
he refused (ThigA.190, 195). Later, at Jetavana,
in the assembly of the Sangha, he declared her to be the chief of the women
possessed of iddhi-power (A.i.25).
The Therīgāthā (vv.234-5) contains several verses attributed to her. Three of
them had been uttered in anguish by a mother who had been unwittingly living as
her daughter's rival with the man who later became the monk
Gangātīriya. Uppalavannā repeated them to
help her to reflect on the harm and vileness of sensual desires. Two others are
utterances of joy on the distinctions she had won and another records a miracle
she performed before the Buddha, with his consent. The rest contain a
conversation between Uppalavannā and Māra (a
conversation, more or less identical with the foregoing, is recorded in
S.i.131f), wherein she tells him that she has passed completely beyond his
power.
The books give several episodes connected with Uppalavannā. Once a young man
named Ananda, who was her cousin and had been in love with her during her
lay-life, hid himself in her hut in Andhavana
and, in spite of her protestations, deprived her of her chastity. It is said
that he was swallowed up by the fires of Avīcī.
From that time onwards, nuns were forbidden to live in Andhavana (DhA.ii.49f;
the incident is referred to in Vin.iii.35). It is said (E.g., DhA.iv.166f) that
this incident gave rise to the question whether even arahants enjoyed the
pleasures of love and wished to gratify their passions. Why should they not? For
they are not trees nor ant-hills, but living creatures with moist flesh. The
Buddha most emphatically declared that thoughts of lust never entered the hearts
of the saints. On another occasion, Uppalavannā came across, in Andhavana, some
meat left behind, obviously for her, by some kind-hearted thief; having cooked
the meat, she took it to the Buddha at Veluvana. Finding him away on his
alms-rounds, she left the meat with Udāyi,
who was looking after the vihāra, to be given to the Buddha, but Udāyi insisted
on Uppalavannā giving him her inner robe as a reward for his services
(Vin.iii.208f).
According to the Dhammapada Commentary (iii.211), the miracle which
Uppalavannā volunteered to perform at the Gandamba-tree, was the assumption of
the form of a cakkavatti, with a retinue extending for thirty-six leagues and
the paying of homage to the Buddha, with all the cakkavatti's followers, in the
presence of the multitude.
Mention is made of a pupil of Uppalavannā, who followed the Buddha for seven
years, learning the Vinaya (Vin.ii.261).
The Buddha declares that Khemā and Uppalavannā
are the measure of his women disciples, and that the believing nun, if she would
aspire perfectly, should aspire to be like them (A.i.88; ii.164; S. ii.236).
In Padumuttara's time Uppalavannā saw a woman disciple who was declared to be
the best of those possessed of supernormal power, and wished for herself a
similar rank in the dispensation of a future Buddha. In the time of Kassapa, she
was one of the seven daughters of Kikī, king of Benares, and having done many
good deeds, was born in heaven. Later, she was born in the world of men and had
to work for her own living. One day she gave to a Pacceka Buddha, who had just
risen from samādhi, a meal of fried rice in his bowl and covered it with a
beautiful lotus; the meal had been prepared for herself. The lotus she
afterwards took back but again replaced it, asking the Pacceka Buddha's
forgiveness. She expressed a wish that she should beget as many sons as there
were grains of rice in her gift, and that lotuses should spring up under her
feet as she walked. In her next birth she was born in a lotus. An ascetic
adopted her as his daughter, but when she grew up, the king of Benares, hearing
of her beauty, asked the ascetic for her hand and made her his chief queen,
under the name of Padumavatī. The king's
other wives were jealous of her beauty, and when the king was away, quelling a
rising of the border tribes, they concealed in caskets the five hundred sons,
chief of whom was the prince Mahāpaduma,
that were born to Padumavatī, and told the king that Padumavatī was a non-human
and had given birth to a log of wood. Padumavatī was sent away in disgrace, but
later, through the instrumentality of Sakka, the trick was exposed, and
Padumavatī regained all her former power and glory. (Her temporary downfall was
due to her having withdrawn her gift of a lotus to the Pacceka Buddha.) Later,
when Mahāpaduma and his brothers became Pacceka Buddhas, Padumavatī died of a
broken heart and was born in a village outside Rājagaha. There some of the
Pacceka Buddhas who had been her sons discovered her, and they all came to a
meal at her house. At the conclusion of the meal she offered them blue lotuses,
and expressed the wish that her complexion should be like the matrix of the blue
lotus.
This account is a summary of the Therīgāthā Commentary, pp.182ff; AA.i.188ff;
but see also DhA.ii.48f.
The Apadāna account of the past lives of Uppakavanna differs from the above
in several details (ii.551. But vv.1-15 quoted in the ThigA. differ from those
in the Apadāna, and agree with the ThigA. account). According to this account,
in Padumuttara's time she was a Nāga maiden named Vimalā and was impressed by
the iddhi-powers displayed by a nun, hence her wish for similar powers. The
Apadāna also mentions Uppalavannā's birth as the daughter of a banker of
Benares, in the time of Vipassī. She gave great alms to the Buddha and the monks
and made offerings of lotuses. She was the second daughter of Kikī and her name
was Samannaguttā. In her next birth she became the ravishing daughter of
Tirītavaccha of Aritthapura. In her last birth she became an arahant within a
fortnight of her ordination.
Uppalavannā's name occurs several times in the Jātakas.
- In the Kharādiya Jātaka (J.i.160) she was a deer, the sister of the
Bodhisatta;
- in the Tipallatthamiga Jātaka (J.i.164) she was the mother of Rāhula, then
born as a stag.
- She is identified with the old woman, the foster-mother of Ayyakālaka
(J.i.196),
- with the queen Mudulakkhanā (J.i.306),
- the brahminee in the Sārambha (J.i.375),
- the courtesan in the Kurudhamma (J.ii.381),
- the brahmin's daughter (and sister of Rāhula) in the Dhonasākha
(J.iii.168),
- Siridevī in the Sirikālakanni (J.iii.264),
- the goddess in the Bhisapuppha (J.iii.310),
- Manoja's sister in the Manoja (J.iii.324),
- the ascetic's daughter in the Kumbhakāra (J.iii.383),
- the deity in the Jāgarajā (J.iii.405), in the Sankha (J.iv.22), and in the
Kińchanda (J.v.11),
- the sister in the Bhisa (J.iv.314),
- Sutanā in the Rohantamiga (J.iv.423),
- the younger sister in the Jayaddisa (J.v.36),
- Kundalinī in the Tesakuna (J.v.125),
- Ummadantī in the Ummadantī (J.v.227),
- Hiridevatā in the Sudhābhojana (J.v.412),
- the goddess of the parasol in the Mūgapakkha (J.vi.29),
- the ocean spirit in the Mahājanaka (J.vi.68),
- the goddess in the Sāma (J.vi.95),
- Selā in the Khandahāla (J.vi.157),
- Accimukhī in the Bhūridatta (J.vi.219),
- Bherī in the Mahā-ummagga (J.vi.478) and
- Kanhajinā in the Vessantara (J.vi.593).
It was Uppalavannā who ordained Anojā and her companions, by the express wish
of the Buddha (AA.i.178).
2. Uppalavannā.One of the two daughters of Kassapa I. of Ceylon, the
other being Bodhī. The king built a vihāra and called it by his own name
together with those of his daughters. Cv.xxxix.11; see also Cv.Trs.i.43, n.7.

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