Difference between revisions of "Kapimala"
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[[Kapimala]] | [[Kapimala]] | ||
− | [ | + | [[迦毘摩羅]]・[[毘羅尊者]] (n.d.) (Skt; Jpn [[Kabimara]] or [[Bira-sonja]]) |
− | A native of {{Wiki|Pataliputra}} in the [[Indian]] state of [[Magadha]] in the second century. The twelfth of [[Shakyamuni]]'s twenty-three, or the thirteenth of his twenty-four, successors. [[Kapimala]] was originally a [[teacher]] of {{Wiki|Brahmanism}} and tried to harass [[Ashvaghosha]] with his [[supernatural powers]]. [[Ashvaghosha]] refuted his {{Wiki|tenets}}, however, and he converted to [[Buddhism]] along with his three thousand [[disciples]]. Later [[Kapimala]] propagated [[Buddhism]] in southern and western [[India]] and refuted many non-[[Buddhist]] [[teachers]] in [[debate]]. | + | A native of {{Wiki|Pataliputra}} in the [[Indian]] state of [[Magadha]] in the second century. The twelfth of [[Shakyamuni]]'s twenty-three, or the thirteenth of his twenty-four, successors. [[Kapimala]] was originally a [[teacher]] of {{Wiki|Brahmanism}} and tried to harass [[Ashvaghosha]] with his [[supernatural powers]]. [[Ashvaghosha]] refuted his {{Wiki|tenets}}, however, and he converted to [[Buddhism]] along with his three thousand [[disciples]]. Later [[Kapimala]] propagated [[Buddhism]] in southern and {{Wiki|western}} [[India]] and refuted many non-[[Buddhist]] [[teachers]] in [[debate]]. |
</poem> | </poem> | ||
{{R}} | {{R}} | ||
[http://www.sgilibrary.org/search_dict.php?id=1165 www.sgilibrary.org] | [http://www.sgilibrary.org/search_dict.php?id=1165 www.sgilibrary.org] | ||
[[Category:Disciples of Buddha Shakyamuni]] | [[Category:Disciples of Buddha Shakyamuni]] |
Latest revision as of 21:27, 16 April 2014
Kapimala
迦毘摩羅・毘羅尊者 (n.d.) (Skt; Jpn Kabimara or Bira-sonja)
A native of Pataliputra in the Indian state of Magadha in the second century. The twelfth of Shakyamuni's twenty-three, or the thirteenth of his twenty-four, successors. Kapimala was originally a teacher of Brahmanism and tried to harass Ashvaghosha with his supernatural powers. Ashvaghosha refuted his tenets, however, and he converted to Buddhism along with his three thousand disciples. Later Kapimala propagated Buddhism in southern and western India and refuted many non-Buddhist teachers in debate.