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Shakya

Shakya (Pāḷi: Sakya; Sanskrit: शाक्य, romanizedŚākya) was an ancient eastern sub-Himalayan ethnicity and clan of north-eastern region of the Indian subcontinent, whose existence is attested during the Iron Age. The Shakyas were organised into a gaṇasaṅgha (an aristocratic oligarchic republic), also known as the Shakya Republic.[2] The Shakyas were on the periphery, both geographically and culturally, of the eastern Gangetic plain in the Greater Magadha cultural region.[1][3]

Shakya
c. 7th century BCE–c. 5th century BCE
Shakya among the Gaṇasaṅghas
Shakya to the north of the Mahajanapadas in the post-Vedic period
CapitalKapilavastu
Common languagesPrakrits
Munda languages,[1]
Religion
Sramana religions, Sun worship, tree worship, serpent worship
GovernmentRepublic
Historical eraIron Age
• Established
c. 7th century BCE
• Conquered by Viḍūḍabha of Kosala
c. 5th century BCE
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofIndia
Nepal
Gautama Buddha, called Shakyamuni "Sage of the Shakyas," the most famous Shakya. Seated bronze from Tibet, 11th century.

Location

The Shakyas lived along the foothills of the Himālaya mountains, with their neighbours to the west and south being the kingdom of Kosala, their neighbours to the east across the Rohiṇī river being the related Koliya tribe, while on the north-east they bordered on the Mallakas of Kusinārā. To the north, the territory of the Shakyas stretched into the Himālayas until the forested regions of the mountains, which formed their northern border.[2]

The capital of the Shakyas was the city of Kapilavastu.[2][4]

Etymology

The name of the Shakyas is attested primarily in the Pāli forms Sakya and Sakka, and the Sanskrit form Śākya.[2]

The Shakyas' name was derived from the Sanskrit root śak (शक्) (śaknoti (शक्नोति), more rarely śakyati (शक्यति) or śakyate (शक्यते)) meaning "to be able," "worthy," "possible," or "practicable."[2][5] The name of the Shakyas was also derived from the name of the śaka or sāka tree,[6][5] which Bryan Levman has identified with either the teak or sāla tree,[5][1] which is ultimately related to word śākhā (शाखा), meaning ‘branch,’[7] and was connected to the Shakyas' practice of worshipping the śaka or sāka tree.[1]

 
Map of the eastern Gangetic plain before Viḍūḍabha's conquest of Kālāma, Sakya and Koliya
 
Map of the eastern Gangetic plain after Viḍūḍabha's conquest of Kālāma, Sakya and Koliya

History

Origin

The Shakyas were an eastern sub-Himalayan ethnic group on the periphery, both geographically and culturally, of the eastern Gangetic plain in the Greater Magadha cultural region.[8][3] The Shakyas were of ‘mixed origin’ (saṃkīrṇa-yonayaḥ) of Indo-Aryan and Munda descent, with the former group forming a minority.[8] The Shakyas were closely related to their eastern neighbours, the Koliya tribe, with whom they intermarried.[9]

Statehood

By the sixth century BCE, the Shakyas, the Koliyas, Moriyas, and Mallakas lived between the territories of the Kauśalyas to the west and the Licchavikas and Vaidehas to the east, thus separating the Vajjika League from the Kosala kingdom.[2] By that time, the Shakya republic had become a vassal state of the larger Kingdom of Kosala.[10][11]

During the fifth century itself, one of the members of the ruling aristocratic oligarchy of the Shakyas was Suddhodana. Suddhodana was married to the princess Māyā, who was the daughter of a Koliya noble, and the son of Suddhodana and Māyā was Siddhartha Gautama, the historical Buddha and founder of Buddhism.[2]

During the life of the Buddha, an armed feud opposed the Shakyas and the Koliyas concerning the waters of the river Rohiṇī, which formed the boundary between the two states and whose water was needed by both of them to irrigate their crops. The intervention of the Buddha finally put an end to these hostilities.[2]

After the death of the Buddha, the Shakyas claimed a share of his relics from the Mallakas of Kusinārā on the grounds that he had been a Shakya.[2]

Conquest by Kosala

Shortly after the Buddha's death, the Kauśalya king Viḍūḍabha, who had overthrown his father Pasenadi, invaded the Shakya and Koliya republics, seeking to conquer their territories because they had once been part of Kosala. Viḍūḍabha finally triumphed over the Shakyas and Koliyas and annexed their state after a long war with massive loss of lives on both sides. Details of this war were exaggerated by later Buddhist accounts, which claimed that Viḍūḍabha exterminated the Shakyas in retaliation for having given in marriage to his father the slave girl who became Viḍūḍabha's mother. In actuality, Viḍūḍabha's invasion of Shakya might instead have had similar motivations to the conquest of the Vajjika League by Viḍūḍabha's relative, the Māgadhī king Ajātasattu, who, because he was the son of a Vajjika princess, was therefore interested in the territory of his mother's homeland. The result of the Kauśalya invasion was that the Shakyas and Koliyas merely lost political importance after being annexed into Viḍūḍabha's kingdom. The Shakyas nevertheless soon disappeared as an ethnic group after their annexation, having become absorbed into the population of Kosala, with only a few displaced families maintaining the Shakya identity afterwards. The Koliyas likewise disappeared as a polity and as a tribe soon after their annexation.[2][9]

The massive life losses incurred by Kosala during its conquest of Shakya and Koliya weakened it significantly enough that it was itself was soon annexed by its eastern neighbour, the kingdom of Magadha, and its king Viḍūḍabha was defeated and killed by the Māgadhī king Ajātasattu.[2]

Legacy

 
The words "Bu-dhe" and "Sa-kya-mu-nī" (Sage of the "Shakyas") in Brahmi script, on Ashoka's Rummindei Minor Pillar Edict (circa 250 BCE).
 
Bharhut inscription: Bhagavato Sakamunino Bodho ("The illumination of the Blessed Sakamuni"), circa 100 BCE.[12]

The Buddha was given the epithet of the "Sage of the Shakyas," Sakka-muni in Pali and Śākya-muni in Sanskrit, by his followers.[13]

The functioning of the proceedings of Sakka's heaven in Buddhist cosmology are modelled on those of the Shakya santhāgāra.[2]

Social and political organisation

Republican institutions

The Sakyas were organised into a gaṇasaṅgha (an aristocratic oligarchic republic) similarly to the Licchavikas.[2][1]

The Assembly

The heads of the Sakya kṣatriya clans of the Gotama gotta formed an Assembly, and they held the title of rājās. The position of rājā was hereditary, and after a rājā's death was passed to his eldest son, who while he was living held the title of uparājā ("Viceroy").[2][5]

The political system of the Sakyas was identical to that of the Koliyas, and like the Koliyas and the other gaṇasaṅghas, the Assembly met in a santhāgāra, the main of which was located at Kapilavatthu, although at least one other Sakya santhāgāra also existed at Cātuma. The judicial and legislative functions of the Assembly of the Sakyas were not distinctly separated, and it met to discuss important issues concerning public affairs, such as war, peace, and alliances. The Sakya Assembly deliberated on important issues, and it had a simple voting system through either raising hands or the use of wooden chips.[2]

The Council

Similarly to the other gaṇasaṅghas, the Sakya Assembly met rarely and it instead had an inner and smaller Council which met more often to administer the republic in the name of the Assembly. The members of the Council, titled amaccās, formed a college which was directly in charge of public affairs of the republic.[2]

The mahārājā (Consul)

The head of the Sakya republic was an elected chief, which was a position of first among equals similar to Roman consuls and Greek archons, and whose incumbent had the title of mahārājā. The mahārājā was in charge of administering the republic with the help of the Council.[2][9]

Functioning of the Assembly

When sessions of the Assembly were held, the rājās gathered in the santhāgāra; while four amaccās were posted in the four corners or sides of the hall so as to clearly and easily hear the speeches made by the rājās; and the consul rājā took his appointed seat and put forward the matters to be discussed once the Assembly was ready.[2]

During the session, the members of the Assembly expressed their views, which the four amaccās would record. The Assembly was then adjourned, after which the recorders compared their notes, and all the amaccās came back and waited for the recorders' decision.[2]

Class society

The society of the Shakyas and Koliyas was a stratified one within which were present at least the aristocratic, land-owning, attendant, labourer, and serf classes.[2][9] Landholders held the title of bhojakās, literally meaning "enjoyers (of the right to own land)," and used in the sense of "headmen."[2][9] The lower classes of Shakya society consisted of servants, in Pāli called kammakaras (lit.'labourers') and sevakas (lit.'serfs'), who performed the labour in the farms.[1][9]

Culture

Non-Vedic

The Shakyas lived in what scholars presently call the Greater Magadha cultural area, which was located in the eastern Gangetic plain to the east of the confluence of the Gaṅgā and Yamunā rivers. Like the other eastern groups of the Greater Magadha region, the Shakyas were saṃkīrṇa-yonayaḥ ("of mixed origin"), and therefore did not subscribe to the caturvarṇa social organisation consisting of brāhmaṇas, khattiyas, vessas, and suddas; non-Indo-Aryan indigenous clans were instead given the status of suddas, that is of slaves or servants, while the Indo-Aryan clans and the indigenous clans who collaborated with them held the status of khattiyas. Thus, the populations of Greater Magadha did not subscribe to the supremacy of the brāhmaṇas of the peoples of Āryāvarta, and khattiyas were instead the highest class in the societies of Greater Magadha.[1]

Vedic literature therefore considered the populations of Greater Magadha as existing outside of the limits of Āryāvarta, with the Manusmṛiti grouping the Vaidehas, Māgadhīs, Licchavikas, and Mallakas, who were the neighbours of the Shakyas, as being "non-Aryan" and born from mixed caste marriages, and the Baudhāyana-Dharmaśāstras requiring visitors to these lands to perform purificatory sacrifices as expiation.[1]

This negative view of the peoples of the Greater Magadha region by the Vedic peoples extended to the Shakyas, as recorded in the Ambaṭṭha Sutta, according to which the brāhmaṇas described the Shakyas as "fierce, rough-spoken, touchy and violent," and accused them of not honouring, respecting, esteeming, revering or paying homage to the brāhmaṇas owing to their "menial origin."[1]

Language

The Shakyas were a non-Indo-Aryan people under the linguistic influence of Munda languages, as attested by many of their villages having non-Indo-Aryan names, and the name of the founder of their clan, which has been recorded in the Sanskrit form Ikṣvāku and the Pali form Okkāka, being of Munda origin.[8]

Religion

Since they lived in the Greater Magadha cultural area, the Shakyas followed non-Vedic religious customs which drastically differed from the Brahmanical tradition,[1] and even by the time of the Buddha, Brahmanism and the brāhmaṇas had not acquired religious or cultural preponderance in the Greater Magadha area to which Shakya belonged.[14]

It was in this non-Vedic cultural environment that Śramaṇa movements existed, with one of them, Buddhism, having been founded by the Shakya Siddhartha Gautama, the historical Buddha.[1]

Sun worship

The Shakyas worshipped the Sun-god, whom they considered their ancestor,[15] hence why the Shakya kṣatriya clan claimed to be of the Ādicca (Āditya in Sanskrit) gotta,[16][17] and of the Sūryavaṃśa ("Solar dynasty").[5]

Origin myth

The Shakya kṣatriya clan claimed descent from the Sun-god via his descendant, named Okkāka (in Pāli) and Ikṣvāku (in Sanskrit), and whose eight twin sons and daughters who were married to each other had founded the capital city of the Shakyas and were the tribe's ancestors. This was an origin myth of the ruling status of the kṣatriya families of the Shakya clan, who had the right to be represented in the santhāgāra, were often related to each other, and possessed adjacent areas of land, thus establishing kinship, which itself helped form rights of landownership, and, therefore, of political authority.[5]

This myth was also a foundation myth of the city which, as the residence of the ruling families of the clan, the city, which was the centre of political and economic activity, was associated with that clan's janapada (territory), and was equated with the whole janapada itself.[5]

The myth of the Shakyas' ancestors being four pairs of married twin siblings was a myth which traced the origins of the ruling Shakya families to a common ancestor, and was also a myth of an early human utopia where humans were born as couples.[5]

Tree worship

The important role of the Sāl tree in the life of the Buddha according to the Buddhist texts, as well as his representation as a Bodhi tree and his Enlightenment occurring under one such tree, suggest that the Shakyas practised tree worship, a custom likely derived from Munda religious customs of worshipping sacred groves, and the important role in their traditions of the Sāl tree, whose flowering marks the beginning of their New Year and Flower Feast festivals: the Santal tribe worship the Sāl tree and gather to make communal decisions under them Sāl trees.[1]

The importance of the tree spirits called yakkhas and yakkhīs in Pali (yakṣas and yakṣīs in Sanskrit) in early Buddhist texts is an attestation of the worship of these beings done at yakkha cetiyas. The worship of yakkhas and yakkhīs, which was of pre-Indo-Aryan autochthonous origin, was prevalent in the Greater Magadha region.[1]

Serpent worship

The nāga king Mucalinda, who in Buddhist mythology protected the Buddha during a storm under a mucalinda tree, was a both snake- and a tree-deity, thus alluding to the practice of serpent worship among the Shakyas, which originated from among the pre-Indo-Aryan Tibeto-Burman populations of northern South Asia.[1]

Marriage customs

Another reflection of non-Indo-Aryan cultural practices of the Shakyas was the practice of sibling marriages among their ruling clans, which was forbidden among Vaidika peoples, and was a practice of social demarcation and of maintaining power within a smaller sub-group of the Shakya clan, and was therefore not permitted among the lower classes of the Shakya.[1]

Funerary customs

The cremation rituals of the Shakyas which were performed for the funeral of the Buddha as described by Buddhist texts involved wrapping his body in 500 layers of cloth, placing it in an iron vat full of oil as a mark of honour, and then covering it with another iron pot before being cremated. These rites originated from the pre-Indo-Aryan autochthonous populations of the eastern Gangetic plains, as were the practices such as honouring the Buddha's body with singing, dancing, and music, as well as placing his bones in a golden urn, the veneration of these remains and their burial in a round stūpa which possessed a central mast, flags, pennants, and parasols at a public crossroads, which were rituals that were performed by the pre-Indo-Aryan populations for their greater rulers.[1]

Other hypothesis

Scholars such as Michael Witzel and Christopher I. Beckwith have equated the Shakyas with Central Asian nomads who were called Scythians by the Greeks, Sakās by the Achaemenid Persians, and Śāka by the Indo-Aryans. These scholars have suggested that the people of the Buddha were Saka soldiers who arrived into South Asia in the army of Darius I when he conquered the Indus Valley, and saw in Scytho-Saka nomadism the origin of the wandering asceticism of the Buddha.[18][19]

The scholar Bryan Levman however criticised this hypothesis for resting on slim to no evidence, and maintains that the Shakyas were a population native to the north-east Gangetic plain who were unrelated to the Iranic Sakas.[20]

Descent claims

Tharu people of Tarai region of India and Nepal claim descent from Sakya.[21] Significant population of Newars of Kathmandu valley in Nepal use the surname Shakya and also claim to be the descendants of the Shakya clan with titles such as Śākyavamsa (of the Shakya lineage) having been used in the past.[22]

According to Hmannan Yazawin, first published in 1823, the legendary king Abhiyaza, who founded the Tagaung Kingdom and the Burmese monarchy belonged to the same Shakya clan of the Buddha.[23] He migrated to present-day Burma after the annexation of the Shakya kingdom by Kosala. The earlier Burmese accounts stated that he was a descendant of Pyusawhti, son of a solar spirit and a dragon princess.[24]

Chakma people of Chittagong Hill Tracts, Northeast India, and Myanmar in the state of Chin and Arakan believe that they are a part of the Buddha's Shakya Clan. They migrated to Burma due to persecution led by many rulers against Buddhists from Magadha (present day Bihar).The name Chakma can be classified into two words "Chak" and "Ma". The name "Chakma" was given by the Burmese kings, which literally translate to "the Shakya man" in the Burmese language. "Chak" refers to Shakya and "Ma" refers to people or human.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Levman 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Sharma 1968, p. 182-206.
  3. ^ a b Bronkhorst 2007, p. 6.
  4. ^ Trainor, K (2010). "Kapilavastu". In Keown, D; Prebish, CS (eds.). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Milton Park, UK: Routledge. pp. 436–7. ISBN 978-0-415-55624-8.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Thapar 2013, p. 392-399.
  6. ^ Fleet, J. F. (1906). "The Inscription on the Piprawa Vase". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 38 (1): 149–180. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00034079. JSTOR 2521022. S2CID 161625116. we find only a fanciful desire to account for the name Sakya by identifying it with the word sakya, śakya, in the sense of 'able, capable, smart.' But, looking below the surface, we find in the allusion to sākasaṇḍa, sākavanasaṇḍa, the grove of teak-trees, the real origin of the other name, Sākiya, Śākiya, Śākya.
  7. ^ Douglas Q, Adams; Mallory, J. P. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. UK: Routledge. p. 208. ISBN 978-1-884-96498-5.
  8. ^ a b c Levman 2014: "The founder of the Sakya clan, King Ikṣvāku (Pāli: Okkāka) has a Munda name, suggesting that the Sakyas were at least bilingual (Kuiper 1991, 7; Mayrhofer 1992, vol. 1, 185). Many of the Sakya village names are believed to be non-IA in origin (Thomas 1960, 23), and the very word for town or city (nagara; cf. the Sakya village Nagakara, the locus of the Cūḷasuññata Sutta ) is of Dravidian stock (Mayrhofer 1963, vol. 2, 125)."
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    "The Sakya clan derive their ancestry from King Ikṣvāku, whose name is of Austro-Asiatic Munda origin (see above, page 148). While the Sakyans’ rough speech and Munda ancestors do not prove that they spoke a non-IA language, there is a lot of other evidence suggesting that they were indeed a separate ethnic (and probably linguistic) group."
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    "Okkāka was the legendary progenitor of the Sakyas, and bears a name of Munda ancestry"
  9. ^ a b c d e f Sharma 1968, p. 207-217.
  10. ^ Walshe, Maurice (1995). The Long Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Digha Nikaya (PDF). Wisdom Publications. p. 409. ISBN 0-86171-103-3.
  11. ^ Batchelor 2015, Chapter 2, Section 2, 7th paragraph.
  12. ^ Leoshko, Janice (2017). Sacred Traces: British Explorations of Buddhism in South Asia. Routledge. p. 64. ISBN 9781351550307.
  13. ^ Sharma 1968, p. 159-168.
  14. ^ Bronkhorst, Johannes (2011). Buddhism in the Shadow of Brahmanism. Leiden, Netherlands; Boston, United States: Brill. p. 1. ISBN 978-9-004-20140-8.
  15. ^ Batchelor 2015, p. 32-33.
  16. ^ Batchelor 2015, p. 36.
  17. ^ Nakamura, Hajime (2000). Gotama Buddha: A Biography Based on the Most Reliable Texts. Vol. 1. Tokyo, Japan: Kosei Publishing Company. p. 124. ISBN 978-4-333-01893-2.
  18. ^ Attwood, Jayarava (2012). "Possible Iranian Origins for the Śākyas and Aspects of Buddhism". Retrieved 4 June 2022. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ Beckwith, Christopher I. (2015). Greek Buddha: Pyrrho's Encounter with Early Buddhism in Central Asia. Princeton, New Jersey, United States: Princeton University Press. pp. 1–21. ISBN 978-0-691-17632-1.
  20. ^ Levman 2014: "The evidence for this final wave is however, very slim and there is no evidence for it in the Vedic texts; for their western origin, Witzel relies on a reference in Pāṇini (4.2.131, madravṛjyoḥ) to the Vṛjjis in dual relation with the Madras who are from the northwest, and to the Mallas in the Jaiminīya Brāhamaṇa (§198) as arising from the dust of Rajasthan. Neither the Sakyas nor any of the other eastern tribes are mentioned, and of course there is no proof that any of these are Indo-Aryan groups. I view the Sakyas and the later Śakas as two separate groups, the former being aboriginal."
  21. ^ Skar, H. O. (1995). "Myths of origin: the Janajati Movement, local traditions, nationalism and identities in Nepal" (PDF). Contributions to Nepalese Studies. 22 (1): 31–42.
  22. ^ Gellner, David (1989). "Buddhist Monks or Kinsmen of the Buddha? Reflections on the Titles Traditionally Used by Sakyas in the Kathmandu Valley" (PDF). Kailash - Journal of Himalayan Studies. 15: 5–20.
  23. ^ Hla Pe, U (1985). Burma: Literature, Historiography, Scholarship, Language, Life, and Buddhism. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. p. 57. ISBN 978-9971-98-800-5.
  24. ^ Lieberman, Victor B. (2003). Strange Parallels: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c. 800–1830, volume 1, Integration on the Mainland. Cambridge University Press. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-521-80496-7.

Sources

shakya, this, article, about, ancient, group, other, uses, disambiguation, pāḷi, sakya, sanskrit, romanized, Śākya, ancient, eastern, himalayan, ethnicity, clan, north, eastern, region, indian, subcontinent, whose, existence, attested, during, iron, were, orga. This article is about the ancient group For other uses see Shakya disambiguation Shakya Paḷi Sakya Sanskrit श क य romanized Sakya was an ancient eastern sub Himalayan ethnicity and clan of north eastern region of the Indian subcontinent whose existence is attested during the Iron Age The Shakyas were organised into a gaṇasaṅgha an aristocratic oligarchic republic also known as the Shakya Republic 2 The Shakyas were on the periphery both geographically and culturally of the eastern Gangetic plain in the Greater Magadha cultural region 1 3 Shakyac 7th century BCE c 5th century BCEShakya among the Gaṇasaṅgha sShakya to the north of the Mahajanapadas in the post Vedic periodCapitalKapilavastuCommon languagesPrakritsMunda languages 1 ReligionSramana religions Sun worship tree worship serpent worshipGovernmentRepublicHistorical eraIron Age Establishedc 7th century BCE Conquered by Viḍuḍabha of Kosalac 5th century BCEPreceded by Succeeded byKosala KosalaToday part ofIndiaNepalGautama Buddha called Shakyamuni Sage of the Shakyas the most famous Shakya Seated bronze from Tibet 11th century Contents 1 Location 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Origin 3 2 Statehood 3 3 Conquest by Kosala 3 4 Legacy 4 Social and political organisation 4 1 Republican institutions 4 1 1 The Assembly 4 1 2 The Council 4 1 3 The maharaja Consul 4 1 3 1 Functioning of the Assembly 4 2 Class society 4 3 Culture 4 3 1 Non Vedic 4 3 2 Language 4 3 3 Religion 4 3 3 1 Sun worship 4 3 3 2 Origin myth 4 3 3 3 Tree worship 4 3 3 4 Serpent worship 4 3 3 5 Marriage customs 4 3 3 6 Funerary customs 5 Other hypothesis 6 Descent claims 7 References 8 SourcesLocation EditThe Shakyas lived along the foothills of the Himalaya mountains with their neighbours to the west and south being the kingdom of Kosala their neighbours to the east across the Rohiṇi river being the related Koliya tribe while on the north east they bordered on the Mallakas of Kusinara To the north the territory of the Shakyas stretched into the Himalayas until the forested regions of the mountains which formed their northern border 2 The capital of the Shakyas was the city of Kapilavastu 2 4 Etymology EditThe name of the Shakyas is attested primarily in the Pali forms Sakya and Sakka and the Sanskrit form Sakya 2 The Shakyas name was derived from the Sanskrit root sak शक saknoti शक न त more rarely sakyati शक यत or sakyate शक यत meaning to be able worthy possible or practicable 2 5 The name of the Shakyas was also derived from the name of the saka or saka tree 6 5 which Bryan Levman has identified with either the teak or sala tree 5 1 which is ultimately related to word sakha श ख meaning branch 7 and was connected to the Shakyas practice of worshipping the saka or saka tree 1 Map of the eastern Gangetic plain before Viḍuḍabha s conquest of Kalama Sakya and Koliya Map of the eastern Gangetic plain after Viḍuḍabha s conquest of Kalama Sakya and KoliyaHistory EditOrigin Edit The Shakyas were an eastern sub Himalayan ethnic group on the periphery both geographically and culturally of the eastern Gangetic plain in the Greater Magadha cultural region 8 3 The Shakyas were of mixed origin saṃkirṇa yonayaḥ of Indo Aryan and Munda descent with the former group forming a minority 8 The Shakyas were closely related to their eastern neighbours the Koliya tribe with whom they intermarried 9 Statehood Edit By the sixth century BCE the Shakyas the Koliyas Moriyas and Mallakas lived between the territories of the Kausalyas to the west and the Licchavikas and Vaidehas to the east thus separating the Vajjika League from the Kosala kingdom 2 By that time the Shakya republic had become a vassal state of the larger Kingdom of Kosala 10 11 During the fifth century itself one of the members of the ruling aristocratic oligarchy of the Shakyas was Suddhodana Suddhodana was married to the princess Maya who was the daughter of a Koliya noble and the son of Suddhodana and Maya was Siddhartha Gautama the historical Buddha and founder of Buddhism 2 During the life of the Buddha an armed feud opposed the Shakyas and the Koliyas concerning the waters of the river Rohiṇi which formed the boundary between the two states and whose water was needed by both of them to irrigate their crops The intervention of the Buddha finally put an end to these hostilities 2 After the death of the Buddha the Shakyas claimed a share of his relics from the Mallakas of Kusinara on the grounds that he had been a Shakya 2 Conquest by Kosala Edit Shortly after the Buddha s death the Kausalya king Viḍuḍabha who had overthrown his father Pasenadi invaded the Shakya and Koliya republics seeking to conquer their territories because they had once been part of Kosala Viḍuḍabha finally triumphed over the Shakyas and Koliyas and annexed their state after a long war with massive loss of lives on both sides Details of this war were exaggerated by later Buddhist accounts which claimed that Viḍuḍabha exterminated the Shakyas in retaliation for having given in marriage to his father the slave girl who became Viḍuḍabha s mother In actuality Viḍuḍabha s invasion of Shakya might instead have had similar motivations to the conquest of the Vajjika League by Viḍuḍabha s relative the Magadhi king Ajatasattu who because he was the son of a Vajjika princess was therefore interested in the territory of his mother s homeland The result of the Kausalya invasion was that the Shakyas and Koliyas merely lost political importance after being annexed into Viḍuḍabha s kingdom The Shakyas nevertheless soon disappeared as an ethnic group after their annexation having become absorbed into the population of Kosala with only a few displaced families maintaining the Shakya identity afterwards The Koliyas likewise disappeared as a polity and as a tribe soon after their annexation 2 9 The massive life losses incurred by Kosala during its conquest of Shakya and Koliya weakened it significantly enough that it was itself was soon annexed by its eastern neighbour the kingdom of Magadha and its king Viḍuḍabha was defeated and killed by the Magadhi king Ajatasattu 2 Legacy Edit The words Bu dhe and Sa kya mu ni Sage of the Shakyas in Brahmi script on Ashoka s Rummindei Minor Pillar Edict circa 250 BCE Bharhut inscription Bhagavato Sakamunino Bodho The illumination of the Blessed Sakamuni circa 100 BCE 12 The Buddha was given the epithet of the Sage of the Shakyas Sakka muni in Pali and Sakya muni in Sanskrit by his followers 13 The functioning of the proceedings of Sakka s heaven in Buddhist cosmology are modelled on those of the Shakya santhagara 2 Social and political organisation EditRepublican institutions Edit The Sakyas were organised into a gaṇasaṅgha an aristocratic oligarchic republic similarly to the Licchavikas 2 1 The Assembly Edit The heads of the Sakya kṣatriya clans of the Gotama gotta formed an Assembly and they held the title of raja s The position of raja was hereditary and after a raja s death was passed to his eldest son who while he was living held the title of uparaja Viceroy 2 5 The political system of the Sakyas was identical to that of the Koliyas and like the Koliyas and the other gaṇasaṅgha s the Assembly met in a santhagara the main of which was located at Kapilavatthu although at least one other Sakya santhagara also existed at Catuma The judicial and legislative functions of the Assembly of the Sakyas were not distinctly separated and it met to discuss important issues concerning public affairs such as war peace and alliances The Sakya Assembly deliberated on important issues and it had a simple voting system through either raising hands or the use of wooden chips 2 The Council Edit Similarly to the other gaṇasaṅgha s the Sakya Assembly met rarely and it instead had an inner and smaller Council which met more often to administer the republic in the name of the Assembly The members of the Council titled amacca s formed a college which was directly in charge of public affairs of the republic 2 The maharaja Consul Edit The head of the Sakya republic was an elected chief which was a position of first among equals similar to Roman consuls and Greek archons and whose incumbent had the title of maharaja The maharaja was in charge of administering the republic with the help of the Council 2 9 Functioning of the Assembly Edit When sessions of the Assembly were held the raja s gathered in the santhagara while four amacca s were posted in the four corners or sides of the hall so as to clearly and easily hear the speeches made by the raja s and the consul raja took his appointed seat and put forward the matters to be discussed once the Assembly was ready 2 During the session the members of the Assembly expressed their views which the four amacca s would record The Assembly was then adjourned after which the recorders compared their notes and all the amacca s came back and waited for the recorders decision 2 Class society Edit The society of the Shakyas and Koliyas was a stratified one within which were present at least the aristocratic land owning attendant labourer and serf classes 2 9 Landholders held the title of bhojaka s literally meaning enjoyers of the right to own land and used in the sense of headmen 2 9 The lower classes of Shakya society consisted of servants in Pali called kammakara s lit labourers and sevaka s lit serfs who performed the labour in the farms 1 9 Culture Edit Non Vedic Edit The Shakyas lived in what scholars presently call the Greater Magadha cultural area which was located in the eastern Gangetic plain to the east of the confluence of the Gaṅga and Yamuna rivers Like the other eastern groups of the Greater Magadha region the Shakyas were saṃkirṇa yonayaḥ of mixed origin and therefore did not subscribe to the caturvarṇa social organisation consisting of brahmaṇa s khattiya s vessa s and sudda s non Indo Aryan indigenous clans were instead given the status of sudda s that is of slaves or servants while the Indo Aryan clans and the indigenous clans who collaborated with them held the status of khattiya s Thus the populations of Greater Magadha did not subscribe to the supremacy of the brahmaṇa s of the peoples of Aryavarta and khattiya s were instead the highest class in the societies of Greater Magadha 1 Vedic literature therefore considered the populations of Greater Magadha as existing outside of the limits of Aryavarta with the Manusmṛiti grouping the Vaidehas Magadhis Licchavikas and Mallakas who were the neighbours of the Shakyas as being non Aryan and born from mixed caste marriages and the Baudhayana Dharmasastra s requiring visitors to these lands to perform purificatory sacrifices as expiation 1 This negative view of the peoples of the Greater Magadha region by the Vedic peoples extended to the Shakyas as recorded in the Ambaṭṭha Sutta according to which the brahmaṇa s described the Shakyas as fierce rough spoken touchy and violent and accused them of not honouring respecting esteeming revering or paying homage to the brahmaṇa s owing to their menial origin 1 Language Edit The Shakyas were a non Indo Aryan people under the linguistic influence of Munda languages as attested by many of their villages having non Indo Aryan names and the name of the founder of their clan which has been recorded in the Sanskrit form Ikṣvaku and the Pali form Okkaka being of Munda origin 8 Religion Edit Since they lived in the Greater Magadha cultural area the Shakyas followed non Vedic religious customs which drastically differed from the Brahmanical tradition 1 and even by the time of the Buddha Brahmanism and the brahmaṇa s had not acquired religious or cultural preponderance in the Greater Magadha area to which Shakya belonged 14 It was in this non Vedic cultural environment that Sramaṇa movements existed with one of them Buddhism having been founded by the Shakya Siddhartha Gautama the historical Buddha 1 Sun worship Edit The Shakyas worshipped the Sun god whom they considered their ancestor 15 hence why the Shakya kṣatriya clan claimed to be of the Adicca Aditya in Sanskrit gotta 16 17 and of the Suryavaṃsa Solar dynasty 5 Origin myth Edit The Shakya kṣatriya clan claimed descent from the Sun god via his descendant named Okkaka in Pali and Ikṣvaku in Sanskrit and whose eight twin sons and daughters who were married to each other had founded the capital city of the Shakyas and were the tribe s ancestors This was an origin myth of the ruling status of the kṣatriya families of the Shakya clan who had the right to be represented in the santhagara were often related to each other and possessed adjacent areas of land thus establishing kinship which itself helped form rights of landownership and therefore of political authority 5 This myth was also a foundation myth of the city which as the residence of the ruling families of the clan the city which was the centre of political and economic activity was associated with that clan s janapada territory and was equated with the whole janapada itself 5 The myth of the Shakyas ancestors being four pairs of married twin siblings was a myth which traced the origins of the ruling Shakya families to a common ancestor and was also a myth of an early human utopia where humans were born as couples 5 Tree worship Edit The important role of the Sal tree in the life of the Buddha according to the Buddhist texts as well as his representation as a Bodhi tree and his Enlightenment occurring under one such tree suggest that the Shakyas practised tree worship a custom likely derived from Munda religious customs of worshipping sacred groves and the important role in their traditions of the Sal tree whose flowering marks the beginning of their New Year and Flower Feast festivals the Santal tribe worship the Sal tree and gather to make communal decisions under them Sal trees 1 The importance of the tree spirits called yakkha s and yakkhi s in Pali yakṣa s and yakṣi s in Sanskrit in early Buddhist texts is an attestation of the worship of these beings done at yakkha cetiya s The worship of yakkha s and yakkhi s which was of pre Indo Aryan autochthonous origin was prevalent in the Greater Magadha region 1 Serpent worship Edit The naga king Mucalinda who in Buddhist mythology protected the Buddha during a storm under a mucalinda tree was a both snake and a tree deity thus alluding to the practice of serpent worship among the Shakyas which originated from among the pre Indo Aryan Tibeto Burman populations of northern South Asia 1 Marriage customs Edit Another reflection of non Indo Aryan cultural practices of the Shakyas was the practice of sibling marriages among their ruling clans which was forbidden among Vaidika peoples and was a practice of social demarcation and of maintaining power within a smaller sub group of the Shakya clan and was therefore not permitted among the lower classes of the Shakya 1 Funerary customs Edit The cremation rituals of the Shakyas which were performed for the funeral of the Buddha as described by Buddhist texts involved wrapping his body in 500 layers of cloth placing it in an iron vat full of oil as a mark of honour and then covering it with another iron pot before being cremated These rites originated from the pre Indo Aryan autochthonous populations of the eastern Gangetic plains as were the practices such as honouring the Buddha s body with singing dancing and music as well as placing his bones in a golden urn the veneration of these remains and their burial in a round stupa which possessed a central mast flags pennants and parasols at a public crossroads which were rituals that were performed by the pre Indo Aryan populations for their greater rulers 1 Other hypothesis EditScholars such as Michael Witzel and Christopher I Beckwith have equated the Shakyas with Central Asian nomads who were called Scythians by the Greeks Saka s by the Achaemenid Persians and Saka by the Indo Aryans These scholars have suggested that the people of the Buddha were Saka soldiers who arrived into South Asia in the army of Darius I when he conquered the Indus Valley and saw in Scytho Saka nomadism the origin of the wandering asceticism of the Buddha 18 19 The scholar Bryan Levman however criticised this hypothesis for resting on slim to no evidence and maintains that the Shakyas were a population native to the north east Gangetic plain who were unrelated to the Iranic Sakas 20 Descent claims EditTharu people of Tarai region of India and Nepal claim descent from Sakya 21 Significant population of Newars of Kathmandu valley in Nepal use the surname Shakya and also claim to be the descendants of the Shakya clan with titles such as Sakyavamsa of the Shakya lineage having been used in the past 22 According to Hmannan Yazawin first published in 1823 the legendary king Abhiyaza who founded the Tagaung Kingdom and the Burmese monarchy belonged to the same Shakya clan of the Buddha 23 He migrated to present day Burma after the annexation of the Shakya kingdom by Kosala The earlier Burmese accounts stated that he was a descendant of Pyusawhti son of a solar spirit and a dragon princess 24 Chakma people of Chittagong Hill Tracts Northeast India and Myanmar in the state of Chin and Arakan believe that they are a part of the Buddha s Shakya Clan They migrated to Burma due to persecution led by many rulers against Buddhists from Magadha present day Bihar The name Chakma can be classified into two words Chak and Ma The name Chakma was given by the Burmese kings which literally translate to the Shakya man in the Burmese language Chak refers to Shakya and Ma refers to people or human References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Levman 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Sharma 1968 p 182 206 a b Bronkhorst 2007 p 6 Trainor K 2010 Kapilavastu In Keown D Prebish CS eds Encyclopedia of Buddhism Milton Park UK Routledge pp 436 7 ISBN 978 0 415 55624 8 a b c d e f g h Thapar 2013 p 392 399 Fleet J F 1906 The Inscription on the Piprawa Vase The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 38 1 149 180 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00034079 JSTOR 2521022 S2CID 161625116 we find only a fanciful desire to account for the name Sakya by identifying it with the word sakya sakya in the sense of able capable smart But looking below the surface we find in the allusion to sakasaṇḍa sakavanasaṇḍa the grove of teak trees the real origin of the other name Sakiya Sakiya Sakya Douglas Q Adams Mallory J P 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture UK Routledge p 208 ISBN 978 1 884 96498 5 a b c Levman 2014 The founder of the Sakya clan King Ikṣvaku Pali Okkaka has a Munda name suggesting that the Sakyas were at least bilingual Kuiper 1991 7 Mayrhofer 1992 vol 1 185 Many of the Sakya village names are believed to be non IA in origin Thomas 1960 23 and the very word for town or city nagara cf the Sakya village Nagakara the locus of the Cuḷasunnata Sutta is of Dravidian stock Mayrhofer 1963 vol 2 125 The Sakya clan derive their ancestry from King Ikṣvaku whose name is of Austro Asiatic Munda origin see above page 148 While the Sakyans rough speech and Munda ancestors do not prove that they spoke a non IA language there is a lot of other evidence suggesting that they were indeed a separate ethnic and probably linguistic group Okkaka was the legendary progenitor of the Sakyas and bears a name of Munda ancestry a b c d e f Sharma 1968 p 207 217 Walshe Maurice 1995 The Long Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Digha Nikaya PDF Wisdom Publications p 409 ISBN 0 86171 103 3 Batchelor 2015 Chapter 2 Section 2 7th paragraph Leoshko Janice 2017 Sacred Traces British Explorations of Buddhism in South Asia Routledge p 64 ISBN 9781351550307 Sharma 1968 p 159 168 Bronkhorst Johannes 2011 Buddhism in the Shadow of Brahmanism Leiden Netherlands Boston United States Brill p 1 ISBN 978 9 004 20140 8 Batchelor 2015 p 32 33 Batchelor 2015 p 36 Nakamura Hajime 2000 Gotama Buddha A Biography Based on the Most Reliable Texts Vol 1 Tokyo Japan Kosei Publishing Company p 124 ISBN 978 4 333 01893 2 Attwood Jayarava 2012 Possible Iranian Origins for the Sakyas and Aspects of Buddhism Retrieved 4 June 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Beckwith Christopher I 2015 Greek Buddha Pyrrho s Encounter with Early Buddhism in Central Asia Princeton New Jersey United States Princeton University Press pp 1 21 ISBN 978 0 691 17632 1 Levman 2014 The evidence for this final wave is however very slim and there is no evidence for it in the Vedic texts for their western origin Witzel relies on a reference in Paṇini 4 2 131 madravṛjyoḥ to the Vṛjjis in dual relation with the Madras who are from the northwest and to the Mallas in the Jaiminiya Brahamaṇa 198 as arising from the dust of Rajasthan Neither the Sakyas nor any of the other eastern tribes are mentioned and of course there is no proof that any of these are Indo Aryan groups I view the Sakyas and the later Sakas as two separate groups the former being aboriginal Skar H O 1995 Myths of origin the Janajati Movement local traditions nationalism and identities in Nepal PDF Contributions to Nepalese Studies 22 1 31 42 Gellner David 1989 Buddhist Monks or Kinsmen of the Buddha Reflections on the Titles Traditionally Used by Sakyas in the Kathmandu Valley PDF Kailash Journal of Himalayan Studies 15 5 20 Hla Pe U 1985 Burma Literature Historiography Scholarship Language Life and Buddhism Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies p 57 ISBN 978 9971 98 800 5 Lieberman Victor B 2003 Strange Parallels Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 volume 1 Integration on the Mainland Cambridge University Press p 196 ISBN 978 0 521 80496 7 Sources EditBatchelor Stephen 2015 After Buddhism Rethinking the Dharma for a Secular Age New Haven Connecticut United States Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21622 6 Bronkhorst Johannes 2007 Greater Magadha Studies in the culture of Early India doi 10 1163 ej 9789004157194 i 416 ISBN 978 9 047 41965 5 Levman Bryan G 2014 Cultural Remnants of the Indigenous Peoples in the Buddhist Scriptures Buddhist Studies Review 30 2 145 180 doi 10 1558 bsrv v30i2 145 Retrieved 4 June 2022 Sharma J P 1968 Republics in Ancient India C 1500 B C 500 B C Leiden Netherlands E J Brill ISBN 978 9 004 02015 3 Thapar Romila 2013 The Past Before Us Cambridge Massachusetts United States Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72651 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shakya amp oldid 1165488637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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