Vessabhū Buddha

Vessabhū is the twenty fourth Buddha. He was born in the pleasance of Anoma (Commentary, Anūpama), his father being the khattiya Suppatita (Supatita) and his mother Yasavatī.* [1][2] He is venerated by the Theravada, Mahayana, Vajrayana traditions.

Viśvabhū Buddha
Sanskritविश्वभू
Viśvabhū
PāliVessabhū
Burmeseဝေဿဘူဘုရား
Chinese毗舍婆佛
(Pinyin: Píshèpó Fó)
Japanese毘舎浮仏びしゃふぶつ
(romaji: Bishafu Butsu)
Korean비사부불
(RR: Bisabu Bul)
Sinhalaවෙස්සභු
Thaiพระเวสสภูพุทธเจ้า
Phra Wetsaphu Phutthachao
Tibetanཐམས་ཅད་སྐྱོབ་
Wylie: thams cad skyob
VietnamesePhật Tỳ Xá Phù
Information
Venerated byTheravada, Mahayana, Vajrayana
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Life

For six thousand years he lived in the household in three palaces: Ruci, Suruci and Vaddhana (Rativaddhana); his wife was Sucittā, and their son Suppabuddha. He left home in a golden palanquin, practiced austerities for six months, was given rice milk by Sirivaddhanā of Sucittanigama, and grass for his seat by the Nāga king Narinda, and attained Enlightenment under a sāla tree. He preached his first sermon at Anurārāma to his brothers, Sona and Uttara, who became his chief disciples.[1][2]

gollark: I mean TV shows and such.
gollark: Why? It isn't like the video streaming industry where each service has a different catalog.
gollark: That's very boring compared to saying superior things like "you are literally purely composed of positively charged K mesons right now".
gollark: So is saying "go away".
gollark: On said elbow.

See also

  • List of the twenty-eight Buddhas

References

  1. Malalasekera, GP (2007). "Buddha". Dictionary of Pāli proper names. Delhi, India: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited. pp. 294–305. ISBN 978-81-208-3020-2.
  2. Davids, TWR; Davids, R (1878). "The successive bodhisats in the times of the previous Buddhas". Buddhist birth-stories; Jataka tales. The commentarial introduction entitled Nidana-Katha; the story of the lineage. London: George Routledge & Sons. pp. 115–44.
Buddhist titles
Preceded by
Sikhī Buddha
Seven Buddhas of the Past Succeeded by
Kakusandha Buddha


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