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Aśvaghoṣa

Aśvaghoṣa, also transliterated Ashvaghosha, (Sanskrit: [ˌɐɕʋɐˈɡʱoːʂɐ], अश्वघोष; lit. "Having a Horse-Voice"; Tibetan: སློབ་དཔོན་དཔའ་བོ།, Wylie: slob dpon dpa' bo; Chinese 馬鳴菩薩 pinyin: Mǎmíng púsà, litt.: 'Bodhisattva with a Horse-Voice') (c. 80 – c. 150 CE), was a Sarvāstivāda or Mahasanghika Buddhist philosopher, dramatist, poet and orator from India. He was born in Saketa, today known as Ayodhya.[1][2] He is believed to have been the first Sanskrit dramatist, and is considered the greatest Indian poet prior to Kālidāsa. It seems probable that he was the contemporary and spiritual adviser of Kanishka in the first century of our era.[3] He was the most famous in a group of Buddhist court writers, whose epics rivalled the contemporary Ramayana.[4] Whereas much of Buddhist literature prior to the time of Aśvaghoṣa had been composed in Pāli and Prakrit, Aśvaghoṣa wrote in Classical Sanskrit.[5]

Aśvaghoṣa
Aśvaghoṣa as a Mahayana patriarch
OccupationPoet, dramatist, philosopher
LanguageSanskrit
Periodc. 1st century CE
GenreSanskrit drama, epic poetry, kāvya
SubjectSarvāstivāda or Mahāsāṃghika Buddhism
Notable worksBuddhacharita, Saundarananda, Sutralankara

Life Edit

He is said to have been born in Ayodhya.[6] His original (lay) name is unknown, Aśvaghosa being a later nickname only. According to the traditional biography of Aśvaghoṣa,[7][8] which was translated into Chinese by Kumārajīva, and preserved in that language, he was originally a wandering ascetic who was able to defeat all-comers in debate. He set a challenge to the Buddhist monks that if none could meet with him in debate then they should stop beating the wood-block which signalled to the people to bring offerings to them. There was no one there to meet the challenge so they stopped beating the wood-block.

However, in the north there was an elder bhikṣu named Pārśva at the time, who saw that if he could convert this ascetic, it would be a great asset to the propagation of the Dharma, so he travelled from northern India and had the wood-block sounded. The ascetic came to ask why it had been sounded. Though thinking the old monk would be unable to debate with him, he accepted the challenge. After seven days, the debate was held in front of the King, his Ministers, and many ascetics and brahmans. The loser agreed to become the disciple of the other.

They agreed that the elder Pārśva should speak first, and he said: "The world should be made peaceable, with a long-lived king, plentiful harvests, and joy throughout the land, with none of the myriad calamities", to which the ascetic had no response and so was bound to become Pārśva's disciple, and he was given full ordination as a bhikṣu. Although he had to consent to this, he still was not convinced of the elder's virtues until he showed him he had mastered the Bases of Spiritual Power (r̥ddhipādāḥ), at which point he gained faith. Pārśva then taught him the 5 Faculties, the 5 Powers, the 7 Factors and the 8-fold Noble Path, and he eventually mastered the teaching.

Later, the central kingdom was besieged by the Kuṣāna King's army, who demanded 300,000 gold pieces in tribute. The King could not pay so much, as he had only 100,000. The Kuṣāna King therefore asked for the Buddha's begging bowl, the converted monk, and the 100,000 gold pieces for his tribute. Although the King of the central kingdom was unhappy, the monk persuaded him it would be for the good of the propagation of the Dharma which would spread across the four continents if he went with the Kuṣāna King. He was therefore taken away.

The Kuṣāna's King's Ministers, however, were unhappy, not thinking that the bhikṣu was priced correctly at 100,000 gold pieces. The King, who knew the worth of bhiksu, ordered that seven horses be starved for six days. The King then made an assembly and had the bhikṣu preach the Dharma. Even the horses, whose favourite food was placed in front of them, were entranced by the Teaching of the monk, and listened intently. Everybody was thereby convinced of his worth. He was then granted the name Aśvaghoṣa, Horse-Cry.

He travelled throughout northern India proclaiming the Dharma and guiding all through his wisdom and understanding, and he was held in great regard by the four-fold assembly, who knew him as The Sun of Merit and Virtue.

It is now believed that Aśvaghoṣa was not from the Mahayanist period,[9] and seems to have been ordained into a subsect of the Mahasanghikas.[10] Some recent research into his kavya poems have revealed that he may have used the Yogacarabhumi as a textual reference, particularly for the Saundarananda, which opens up the possibility he was affiliated with either the Yogacara or the Sautrantika school.[11]

Works Edit

Aśvaghoṣa wrote an epic life of the Buddha called Buddhacharita[12][13] (Acts of the Buddha) in classical Sanskrit. The monk I-tsing (Yijing) mentioned that in his time Buddhacarita was "...extensively read in all the five parts of India and in the countries of the South Sea (Sumātra, Jāva and the neighbouring islands). He clothed manifold notions and ideas in a few words which so delighted the heart of his reader that he never wearied of perusing the poem. Moreover, it was regarded as a virtue to read it in as much as it contained the noble doctrine in a neat compact form."[14]

He also wrote Saundarananda, a kāvya poem with the theme of conversion of Nanda, Buddha's half-brother, so that he might reach salvation. The first half of the work describes Nanda's life, and the second half of the work describes Buddhist doctrines and ascetic practices.[15][16]

Aśvaghoṣa also wrote drama, and a fragment of his Śāriputraprakaraṇa has survived in Sanskrit.[17]

Other attributed works Edit

There are various works which have been attributed to Aśvaghoṣa which are of questionable authorship.

One of these works is the Tridaṇḍamālā (preserved in a single Sanskrit manuscript) which includes within it various passages from other Aśvaghoṣa works as well as the text of the Śokavinodana (attributed to Aśvaghoṣa).[18]

Aśvaghoṣa has been claimed to be the author of the Sutralankara.[19][20]

Aśvaghoṣa was previously believed to have been the author of the influential East Asian Buddhist text named The Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana (Chinese: 大乘起信論; pinyin: Dàshéng Qǐxìn Lùn), but modern scholars agree that the text was composed in China.[21][22]

Another text ascribed to Aśvaghoṣa is Vajrasuchi, an extensive, beautifully written poetry that is critical of class and inequity imposed by Vedic religion. The relationship between the Vajrasuchi text of Buddhism and Vajrasuchi Upanishad of Hinduism has long been of interest to scholars.[23] This interest among Western scholars began with Brian Houghton Hodgson – a colonial official based in Nepal who was loaned a Sanskrit text titled Vajra Suchi in 1829, by a Buddhist friend of his, whose contents turned out to be similar to the Vajrasuci Upanishad. In 1835, Hodgson published a translation.[24] The first line of the Hodgson translation mentioned "Ashu Ghosa" and invoked "Manju Ghosa" as the Guru of the World. The details of the caste system, its antiquity and "shrewd and argumentative attack" by a Buddhist, in the words of Hodgson, gained wide interest among 19th-century scholars.[23] The scholarship that followed, surmised that "Ashu Ghosa" is possibly the famous Buddhist scholar Aśvaghoṣa, who lived around the 2nd century CE.[25]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Doctrine and Practice in Medieval Korean Buddhism: The Collected Works of Ŭich'ŏn. University of Hawaii Press. 30 November 2016. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-8248-6743-0.
  2. ^ Olivelle, Patrick; Olivelle, Suman, eds. (2005). Manu's Code of Law. Oxford University Press. p. 24. ISBN 9780195171464.
  3. ^ Cowell, Edward Byles (2018). Buddhacharita by Asvaghosa. United Kingdom: Delphi Classics. ISBN 9781786561282.
  4. ^ Randall Collins, The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change. Harvard University Press, 2000, page 220.
  5. ^ Coulson, Michael (1992). Sanskrit. Lincolnwood: NTC Pub. Group. p. xviii. ISBN 978-0-8442-3825-8.
  6. ^ Damien Keown (26 August 2004). A Dictionary of Buddhism. OUP Oxford. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-19-157917-2.
  7. ^ Li Rongxi (2002). The Life of Asvaghosa Bodhisattva; in: , Berkeley CA: Numata Center for Translation and Research, pp. 9–16
  8. ^ Stuart H. Young (trans.), , Maming pusa zhuan 馬鳴菩薩傳, T.50.2046.183a, translated by Tripiṭaka Master Kumārajīva.
  9. ^ Dan Lusthaus, "Critical Buddhism and Returning to the Sources." Pages 30–55 of Jamie Hubbard, Paul Loren Swanson, editors, Pruning the bodhi tree: the storm over critical Buddhism. University of Hawaii Press, 1997, page 33.
  10. ^ Alexander Wynne, The Origin of Buddhist Meditation. Routledge, 2007, page 26.
  11. ^ Yamabe, Nobuyoshi. 'On the School Affiliation of Aśvaghoṣa: "Sautrāntika" or "Yogācāra"?' Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Vol. 26 (2), 225-249, 2003. PDF
  12. ^ E. B. Cowell (trans): Buddhist Mahâyâna Texts, "The Buddha-karita of Asvaghosha", Sacred Books of the East, Clarendon Press, Oxford 1894. Available online
  13. ^ Willemen, Charles, transl. (2009), , Berkeley, Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research. ISBN 978-1886439-42-9
  14. ^ J.K. Nariman: Literary History of Sanskrit Buddhism, Bombay 1919. Aśvaghoṣa and his School 10 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Yoshichika Honda. 'Indian Buddhism and the kāvya literature: Asvaghosa's Saundaranandakavya.' Hiroshima Daigaku Daigakuin Bungaku Kenkyuuka ronshuu, vol. 64, pp. 17–26, 2004. [1] (Japanese)
  16. ^ Johnston, E. H. (1928). Saundarananda (PDF). Lahore: University of Panjab.
  17. ^ Samir Kumar Datta (1979). Aśvaghoṣa as a Poet and a Dramatist: A Critical Study, p. 123. University of Burdwan.
  18. ^ Péter-Dániel Szántó; 松田 (Matsuda) 和信 (Kazunobu); Jens-Uwe Hartmann, 2022. The Benefit of Cooperation: Recovering the Śokavinodana Ascribed to Aśvaghoṣa, Dharmayātrā: Papers on Ancient South Asian Philosophies, Asian Culture and Their Transmission. Presented to Venerable Tampalawela Dhammaratana on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday.
  19. ^ Strong, John S. (1983). The Legend of King Asoka. Princeton University Press. p. 108. ISBN 9780691605074.
  20. ^ Nariman, J.K. (1923). Literary History of Sanskrit Buddhism (PDF) (2 ed.). Indian Book Depot, Bombay. p. 177.
  21. ^ Nattier, Jan. 'The Heart Sūtra: A Chinese Apocryphal Text?'. Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Vol. 15 (2), 180–81, 1992. PDF 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Chinese Buddhist Apocrypha by Robert E. Buswell. University of Hawaii Press: 1990. ISBN 0-8248-1253-0. pgs 1–29
  23. ^ a b Winternitz, Moriz (1920). A History of Indian Literature: Buddhist literature and Jaina literature, Vol 2 (in German). Motilal Banarsidass (Reprint: 1993, ISBN/OCLC refer to the Translation into English by V Srinivasa Sarma. pp. 254–255 (German version: pages 209–211). ISBN 978-8120802650. OCLC 742450268.
  24. ^ Brian Houghton Hodgson (1835), Vajra Suchi by Asvaghosha, Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Transactions, Volume III, J. Murray and Parbury, Allen & Co., [2]
  25. ^ Dalal, Roshen (2010). The Religions of India: A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths. Penguin Books. p. 35. ISBN 978-0143415176.

Bibliography Edit

  • Buswell, Robert E., ed. (2004). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Macmillan Reference USA. p. 35. ISBN 0-02-865718-7.

External links Edit

aśvaghoṣa, also, transliterated, ashvaghosha, sanskrit, ˌɐɕʋɐˈɡʱoːʂɐ, अश, वघ, having, horse, voice, tibetan, དཔ, དཔའ, wylie, slob, dpon, chinese, 馬鳴菩薩, pinyin, mǎmíng, púsà, litt, bodhisattva, with, horse, voice, sarvāstivāda, mahasanghika, buddhist, philosoph. Asvaghoṣa also transliterated Ashvaghosha Sanskrit ˌɐɕʋɐˈɡʱoːʂɐ अश वघ ष lit Having a Horse Voice Tibetan ས བ དཔ ན དཔའ བ Wylie slob dpon dpa bo Chinese 馬鳴菩薩 pinyin Mǎming pusa litt Bodhisattva with a Horse Voice c 80 c 150 CE was a Sarvastivada or Mahasanghika Buddhist philosopher dramatist poet and orator from India He was born in Saketa today known as Ayodhya 1 2 He is believed to have been the first Sanskrit dramatist and is considered the greatest Indian poet prior to Kalidasa It seems probable that he was the contemporary and spiritual adviser of Kanishka in the first century of our era 3 He was the most famous in a group of Buddhist court writers whose epics rivalled the contemporary Ramayana 4 Whereas much of Buddhist literature prior to the time of Asvaghoṣa had been composed in Pali and Prakrit Asvaghoṣa wrote in Classical Sanskrit 5 AsvaghoṣaAsvaghoṣa as a Mahayana patriarchOccupationPoet dramatist philosopherLanguageSanskritPeriodc 1st century CEGenreSanskrit drama epic poetry kavyaSubjectSarvastivada or Mahasaṃghika BuddhismNotable worksBuddhacharita Saundarananda Sutralankara Contents 1 Life 2 Works 2 1 Other attributed works 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksLife EditHe is said to have been born in Ayodhya 6 His original lay name is unknown Asvaghosa being a later nickname only According to the traditional biography of Asvaghoṣa 7 8 which was translated into Chinese by Kumarajiva and preserved in that language he was originally a wandering ascetic who was able to defeat all comers in debate He set a challenge to the Buddhist monks that if none could meet with him in debate then they should stop beating the wood block which signalled to the people to bring offerings to them There was no one there to meet the challenge so they stopped beating the wood block However in the north there was an elder bhikṣu named Parsva at the time who saw that if he could convert this ascetic it would be a great asset to the propagation of the Dharma so he travelled from northern India and had the wood block sounded The ascetic came to ask why it had been sounded Though thinking the old monk would be unable to debate with him he accepted the challenge After seven days the debate was held in front of the King his Ministers and many ascetics and brahmans The loser agreed to become the disciple of the other They agreed that the elder Parsva should speak first and he said The world should be made peaceable with a long lived king plentiful harvests and joy throughout the land with none of the myriad calamities to which the ascetic had no response and so was bound to become Parsva s disciple and he was given full ordination as a bhikṣu Although he had to consent to this he still was not convinced of the elder s virtues until he showed him he had mastered the Bases of Spiritual Power r ddhipadaḥ at which point he gained faith Parsva then taught him the 5 Faculties the 5 Powers the 7 Factors and the 8 fold Noble Path and he eventually mastered the teaching Later the central kingdom was besieged by the Kuṣana King s army who demanded 300 000 gold pieces in tribute The King could not pay so much as he had only 100 000 The Kuṣana King therefore asked for the Buddha s begging bowl the converted monk and the 100 000 gold pieces for his tribute Although the King of the central kingdom was unhappy the monk persuaded him it would be for the good of the propagation of the Dharma which would spread across the four continents if he went with the Kuṣana King He was therefore taken away The Kuṣana s King s Ministers however were unhappy not thinking that the bhikṣu was priced correctly at 100 000 gold pieces The King who knew the worth of bhiksu ordered that seven horses be starved for six days The King then made an assembly and had the bhikṣu preach the Dharma Even the horses whose favourite food was placed in front of them were entranced by the Teaching of the monk and listened intently Everybody was thereby convinced of his worth He was then granted the name Asvaghoṣa Horse Cry He travelled throughout northern India proclaiming the Dharma and guiding all through his wisdom and understanding and he was held in great regard by the four fold assembly who knew him as The Sun of Merit and Virtue It is now believed that Asvaghoṣa was not from the Mahayanist period 9 and seems to have been ordained into a subsect of the Mahasanghikas 10 Some recent research into his kavya poems have revealed that he may have used the Yogacarabhumi as a textual reference particularly for the Saundarananda which opens up the possibility he was affiliated with either the Yogacara or the Sautrantika school 11 Works EditAsvaghoṣa wrote an epic life of the Buddha called Buddhacharita 12 13 Acts of the Buddha in classical Sanskrit The monk I tsing Yijing mentioned that in his time Buddhacarita was extensively read in all the five parts of India and in the countries of the South Sea Sumatra Java and the neighbouring islands He clothed manifold notions and ideas in a few words which so delighted the heart of his reader that he never wearied of perusing the poem Moreover it was regarded as a virtue to read it in as much as it contained the noble doctrine in a neat compact form 14 He also wrote Saundarananda a kavya poem with the theme of conversion of Nanda Buddha s half brother so that he might reach salvation The first half of the work describes Nanda s life and the second half of the work describes Buddhist doctrines and ascetic practices 15 16 Asvaghoṣa also wrote drama and a fragment of his Sariputraprakaraṇa has survived in Sanskrit 17 Other attributed works Edit There are various works which have been attributed to Asvaghoṣa which are of questionable authorship One of these works is the Tridaṇḍamala preserved in a single Sanskrit manuscript which includes within it various passages from other Asvaghoṣa works as well as the text of the Sokavinodana attributed to Asvaghoṣa 18 Asvaghoṣa has been claimed to be the author of the Sutralankara 19 20 Asvaghoṣa was previously believed to have been the author of the influential East Asian Buddhist text named The Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana Chinese 大乘起信論 pinyin Dasheng Qǐxin Lun but modern scholars agree that the text was composed in China 21 22 Another text ascribed to Asvaghoṣa is Vajrasuchi an extensive beautifully written poetry that is critical of class and inequity imposed by Vedic religion The relationship between the Vajrasuchi text of Buddhism and Vajrasuchi Upanishad of Hinduism has long been of interest to scholars 23 This interest among Western scholars began with Brian Houghton Hodgson a colonial official based in Nepal who was loaned a Sanskrit text titled Vajra Suchi in 1829 by a Buddhist friend of his whose contents turned out to be similar to the Vajrasuci Upanishad In 1835 Hodgson published a translation 24 The first line of the Hodgson translation mentioned Ashu Ghosa and invoked Manju Ghosa as the Guru of the World The details of the caste system its antiquity and shrewd and argumentative attack by a Buddhist in the words of Hodgson gained wide interest among 19th century scholars 23 The scholarship that followed surmised that Ashu Ghosa is possibly the famous Buddhist scholar Asvaghoṣa who lived around the 2nd century CE 25 See also EditSanskrit drama Sanskrit literatureReferences Edit Doctrine and Practice in Medieval Korean Buddhism The Collected Works of Ŭich ŏn University of Hawaii Press 30 November 2016 p 161 ISBN 978 0 8248 6743 0 Olivelle Patrick Olivelle Suman eds 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 9780195171464 Cowell Edward Byles 2018 Buddhacharita by Asvaghosa United Kingdom Delphi Classics ISBN 9781786561282 Randall Collins The Sociology of Philosophies A Global Theory of Intellectual Change Harvard University Press 2000 page 220 Coulson Michael 1992 Sanskrit Lincolnwood NTC Pub Group p xviii ISBN 978 0 8442 3825 8 Damien Keown 26 August 2004 A Dictionary of Buddhism OUP Oxford p 23 ISBN 978 0 19 157917 2 Li Rongxi 2002 The Life of Asvaghosa Bodhisattva in The Lives of Great Monks and Nuns Berkeley CA Numata Center for Translation and Research pp 9 16 Stuart H Young trans Biography of the Bodhisattva Asvaghoṣa Maming pusa zhuan 馬鳴菩薩傳 T 50 2046 183a translated by Tripiṭaka Master Kumarajiva Dan Lusthaus Critical Buddhism and Returning to the Sources Pages 30 55 of Jamie Hubbard Paul Loren Swanson editors Pruning the bodhi tree the storm over critical Buddhism University of Hawaii Press 1997 page 33 Alexander Wynne The Origin of Buddhist Meditation Routledge 2007 page 26 Yamabe Nobuyoshi On the School Affiliation of Asvaghoṣa Sautrantika or Yogacara Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Vol 26 2 225 249 2003 PDF E B Cowell trans Buddhist Mahayana Texts The Buddha karita of Asvaghosha Sacred Books of the East Clarendon Press Oxford 1894 Available online Willemen Charles transl 2009 Buddhacarita In Praise of Buddha s Acts Berkeley Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research ISBN 978 1886439 42 9 J K Nariman Literary History of Sanskrit Buddhism Bombay 1919 Asvaghoṣa and his School Archived 10 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Yoshichika Honda Indian Buddhism and the kavya literature Asvaghosa s Saundaranandakavya Hiroshima Daigaku Daigakuin Bungaku Kenkyuuka ronshuu vol 64 pp 17 26 2004 1 Japanese Johnston E H 1928 Saundarananda PDF Lahore University of Panjab Samir Kumar Datta 1979 Asvaghoṣa as a Poet and a Dramatist A Critical Study p 123 University of Burdwan Peter Daniel Szanto 松田 Matsuda 和信 Kazunobu Jens Uwe Hartmann 2022 The Benefit of Cooperation Recovering the Sokavinodana Ascribed to Asvaghoṣa Dharmayatra Papers on Ancient South Asian Philosophies Asian Culture and Their Transmission Presented to Venerable Tampalawela Dhammaratana on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday Strong John S 1983 The Legend of King Asoka Princeton University Press p 108 ISBN 9780691605074 Nariman J K 1923 Literary History of Sanskrit Buddhism PDF 2 ed Indian Book Depot Bombay p 177 Nattier Jan The Heart Sutra A Chinese Apocryphal Text Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Vol 15 2 180 81 1992 PDF Archived 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Chinese Buddhist Apocrypha by Robert E Buswell University of Hawaii Press 1990 ISBN 0 8248 1253 0 pgs 1 29 a b Winternitz Moriz 1920 A History of Indian Literature Buddhist literature and Jaina literature Vol 2 in German Motilal Banarsidass Reprint 1993 ISBN OCLC refer to the Translation into English by V Srinivasa Sarma pp 254 255 German version pages 209 211 ISBN 978 8120802650 OCLC 742450268 Brian Houghton Hodgson 1835 Vajra Suchi by Asvaghosha Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland Transactions Volume III J Murray and Parbury Allen amp Co 2 Dalal Roshen 2010 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin Books p 35 ISBN 978 0143415176 Bibliography EditBuswell Robert E ed 2004 Encyclopedia of Buddhism Macmillan Reference USA p 35 ISBN 0 02 865718 7 External links EditWorks by Asvaghosha at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Asvaghoṣa at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asvaghoṣa amp oldid 1166958464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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