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Upāli

Upāli (Sanskrit and Pāli) was a monk, one of the ten chief disciples of the Buddha[1] and, according to early Buddhist texts, the person in charge of the reciting and reviewing of monastic discipline (Pāli and Sanskrit: vinaya) on the First Buddhist Council. Upāli belongs to the barber community. He met the Buddha when still a child, and later, when the Sakya princes received ordination, he did so as well. He was ordained before the princes, putting humility before caste. Having been ordained, Upāli learnt both Buddhist doctrine (Pali: Dhamma; Sanskrit: Dharma) and vinaya. His preceptor was Kappitaka. Upāli became known for his mastery and strictness of vinaya and was consulted often about vinaya matters. A notable case he decided was that of the monk Ajjuka, who was accused of partisanship in a conflict about real estate. During the First Council, Upāli received the important role of reciting the vinaya, for which he is mostly known.

Upāli
Upāli, Bodh Gaya, India
Personal
ReligionBuddhism
Schoolall, but mostly discussed in Pāli Buddhism
LineageVinayadhara
Known forExpertise in monastic discipline, reviewed monastic discipline during the First Council
Other names'repository of the discipline' (Pali: Vinaye agganikkhitto; 'foremost in discipline' (Pali: Vinaya-pāmokkha)
Senior posting
TeacherThe Buddha, Kappitaka
Period in officeEarly Buddhism
SuccessorDāsaka
Students
  • Sattarasavaggiyā, Dāsaka
InitiationAnupiyā
by the Buddha

Scholars have analyzed Upāli's role and that of other disciples in the early texts, and it has been suggested that his role in the texts was emphasized during a period of compiling that stressed monastic discipline, during which Mahākassapa (Sanskrit: Mahākāśyapa) and Upāli became the most important disciples. Later, Upāli and his pupils became known as vinayadharas (Pāli; 'custodians of the vinaya'), who preserved the monastic discipline after the Buddha's parinibbāna (Sanskrit: parinirvāṇa; passing into final Nirvana). This lineage became an important part of the identity of Ceylonese and Burmese Buddhism. In China, the 7th-century Vinaya school referred to Upāli as their patriarch, and it was believed that one of their founders was a reincarnation of him. The technical conversations about vinaya between the Buddha and Upāli were recorded in the Pāli and Sarvāstivāda traditions and have been suggested as an important subject of study for modern-day ethics in American Buddhism.

Accounts edit

Upāli's personality is not depicted extensively in the texts, as the texts mostly emphasize his stereotypical qualities as an expert in monastic discipline, especially so in the Pāli texts.[2]

Early life edit

According to the texts, Upāli was a barber, a despised profession in ancient India.[3][4] He was from an artisan caste family in service to the Sakya princes in Kapilavatthu (Sanskrit: Śakya; Kapilavastu) and, according to the Mahāvastu, to the Buddha. Upāli's mother had once introduced Upāli to the Buddha.[5] The Mahāvastu, Dharmaguptaka and Chinese texts relate that as a child, Upāli shaved the hair of the Buddha. Unlike adults, he had no fear of approaching the Buddha. Once, as he was guided by the Buddha during the shaving, he attained advanced states of meditation. Buddhologist André Bareau argues that this story is ancient, because it precedes the tradition of art depictions of the Buddha with curly hair, and the glorification of Upāli as an adult.[6]

According to the Mahāvastu, the Pāli Cullavagga and the texts of discipline of the Mūlasarvāstivāda order, when the princes left home to become monks, Upāli followed them. Since the princes handed Upāli all their possessions, including jewelry, he worried that returning to Kapilavatthu with these possessions might cause him to be accused of having killed the princes for theft. Upāli therefore decided to become ordained with them. They were ordained by the Buddha at the Anupiyā grove.[7] Several variations on the story of Upāli's ordination exist, but all of them emphasize that his status in the saṅgha (Sanskrit: saṃgha; monastic community) was independent of his caste origin. In the Pāli version, the princes, including Anuruddha (Sanskrit: Aniruddha), voluntarily allowed Upāli to ordain before them in order to give him seniority in order of ordination and abandon their own attachment to caste and social status.[8]

 
Remains at Tilaurakot, one of the two sites that may have been Kapilavatthu

In the Tibetan Mūlasarvāstivāda version of the story, co-disciple Sāriputta (Sanskrit: Śāriputra) persuaded Upāli to become ordained when he hesitated because of being low caste, but in the Mahāvastu, it was Upāli's own initiative.[8][5] The Mahāvastu continues that after all the monks had been ordained, the Buddha requested that the former princes bow for their former barber, which led to consternation among the witnessing king Bimbisāra and advisers, who also bowed for Upāli following their example.[9] It became widely known that the Sakyans had their barber ordained before them to humble their pride,[10] as the Buddha related a Jātaka tale that the king and advisers had bowed for Upāli in a previous life, too.[9][11]

Indologist T.W. Rhys Davids noted that Upāli was the "striking proof of the reality of the effect produced by Gautama's disregard of the supposed importance of caste".[12] Historian H.W. Schumann also raises Upāli as an example of the general rule that "in no case did ... humble origins prevent a monk from becoming prominent in the Order".[13] Religion scholar Jeffrey Samuels points out, though, that the majority of Buddhist monks and nuns during the time of the Buddha, as drawn from several analyses of Buddhist texts, were from higher castes, with a minority of six percent like Upāli being exception to the rule.[14] Historian Sangh Sen Singh argues that Upāli could have been the leader of the saṅgha after the Buddha's parinibbāna instead of Mahākassapa (Sanskrit: parinirvāṇa, Mahākāśyapa). But the fact that he was from a low caste effectively prevented this, as many of the Buddhist devotees at the time might have objected to his leadership position.[15]

Monastic life edit

Upāli had a dwelling place in Vesāli (Sanskrit: Vaiśāli), called Vālikārāma.[16][17] He once asked the Buddha for leave to withdraw in the forest and lead a life in solitude. The Buddha refused, however, and told him that such a life was not for everyone. Pāli scholar Gunapala Malalasekera argued that the Buddha wanted Upāli to learn both meditation and Buddhist doctrine, and a life in the forest would have provided him with only the former. The texts state that the Buddha himself taught the vinaya (monastic discipline) to Upāli.[18] Upāli later attained the state of an enlightened disciple.[5][19]

According to the Mahāvastu, the preceptor who completed the process of Upāli's acceptance in the saṅgha was a monk called Kappitaka.[20][note 1] There is one story told about Upāli and his preceptor. Kappitaka was in the habit of living in cemeteries. In one cemetery near Vesāli he had a monastic cell. One day, a couple of nuns built a small monument there in honor of their teacher, also a nun, and made much noise in the process. Disturbed by the nuns, Kappitaka destroyed the monument, which greatly angered the nuns. Later, in an attempt to kill Kappitaka, they destroyed his cell in return. But Kappitaka was warned by Upāli in advance and he had already fled elsewhere.[22] The next day, Upāli was verbally abused by the nuns for having informed his teacher.[23]

Role in monastic discipline edit

 
Upāli, woodblock print by Munakata Shikō, originally from 1939

In the literature of every Buddhist school, Upāli is depicted as an expert in vinaya and the pāṭimokkha (Sanskrit: pratimokṣa; monastic code),[5] for which the Buddha declared him foremost among those who remember the vinaya (Pali: Vinaya-pāmokkha; Sanskrit: Vinayapramukkha).[24][25] He was therefore dubbed the 'repository of the discipline' (Pali: Vinaye agganikkhitto).[19] In some schools, he is also seen as an expert in the precepts of a bodhisatta (Sanskrit: bodhisattva; Buddha-to-be).[5] 5th-century commentator Buddhaghosa stated that Upāli drew up instructions and explanatory notes for monks dealing with disciplinary matters.[19]

Upāli was also known for his strictness in practicing the discipline.[26] Monks considered it a privilege to study the vinaya under him.[27] At times, monks who felt repentance and wanted to improve themselves, sought his advice. In other cases, Upāli was consulted in making decisions considering alleged offenses of monastic discipline. For example, one newly ordained nun was found pregnant, and was judged by the monk Devadatta as unfit to be a nun. However, the Buddha had Upāli do a second investigation, during which Upāli called upon the help of the laywoman Visakhā and several other laypeople. Eventually, Upāli concluded the nun had conceived the child by her husband before her ordination as a nun, and therefore was innocent. The Buddha later praised Upāli for his careful consideration of this matter.[28]

Other notable cases about which Upāli decided are that of the monks Bharukaccha and Ajjuka. Bharukaccha consulted Upāli whether dreaming about having sex with a woman amounted to an offense that required disrobing, and Upāli judged it did not. As for the monk Ajjuka, he had decided about a dispute about real estate.[29] In this case, a rich householder was in doubt as to who he should will his inheritance to, his pious nephew or his own son. He asked Ajjuka to invite for an audience the person who had the most faith of the two—Ajjuka invited the nephew. Angry about the decision, the son accused Ajjuka of partisanship and went to see the monk Ānanda. Ānanda disagreed with Ajjuka's decision, judging the son the more rightful heir, and causing the son to feel justified in accusing Ajjuka of not being a "true monk". When Upāli got involved, however, he judged in favor of Ajjuka. He pointed out to Ānanda that the act of inviting a layperson did not break monastic discipline.[30] Eventually, Ānanda agreed with Upāli, and Upāli was able to settle the issue.[31][32] Here, too, the Buddha praised Upāli for his handling of the case.[33] Law scholar Andrew Huxley noted that Upāli's judgment of this case allowed monks to engage on an ethical level with the world, whereas Ānanda's judgment did not.[34]

First Council and death edit

 
The First Council. Mural painting in the Nava Jetavana temple, Jetavana Park, Uttar Pradesh, India, late 20th century

According to the chronicles, Upāli had been ordained (or, was aged[35]) forty-four years at the time of the First Buddhist Council.[36] At the council, Upāli was asked to recite the vinaya of monks and nuns, including the pāṭimokkha,[37], and the Vinayapiṭaka (collection of texts on monastic discipline) was compiled based thereon.[38] Specifically, Upāli was asked about each rule issued by the Buddha as to what it was about, where it was issued, with regard to whom, the formulation of the rule itself, derived secondary rules, and the conditions under which the rule was broken.[39] According to the Mahāsaṃghika account of the First Council, Upāli was the one who charged Ānanda, the former attendant of the Buddha, with several offenses of wrongdoing.[40]

Upāli had a number of pupils, who were called the sattarasavaggiyā.[41] Upāli and his pupils were entrusted with the safekeeping and reciting of this collection of monastic discipline.[42] Sixteen years after the Buddha's passing away, Upāli ordained a pupil called Dāsaka, who would become his successor with regard to expertise in monastic discipline. According to the late Pāli Dīpavaṃsa, Upāli died at the age of seventy-four, if this age is interpreted as life-span, not years of ordination.[35]

Previous lives edit

In some Buddhist texts, an explanation is offered why a low-caste born monk would have such a central role in developing monastic law. The question that might have been raised is whether issuing laws would not normally be associated with kings. The Apadāna explains this by relating that Upāli had been an all-powerful wheel-turning king for thousand previous lives, and a king of the deities in another thousand lives.[43] Before that, the texts say he was born during the age of Padumuttara Buddha and met one of that Buddha's disciples who was foremost in monastic discipline. Upāli aspired to be like him, and pursued it through doing merits.[19][44]

Despite Upāli's previous lives as a king, he was born as a low caste barber in the time of Gotama Buddha. This is also explained in an Apadāna story: in a previous life, Upāli insulted a paccekabuddha (Sanskrit: pratyekabuddha; a type of Buddha). The evil karma brought about low birth.[19][44]

Legacy edit

Upāli was the focus of worship in ancient and medieval India and was regarded as the "patron saint" of monks who specialize in the vinaya.[5][45] He is one of the eight enlightened disciples, and is honored in Burmese ceremonies.[5][46]

Schools and lineages edit

 
1890 map showing the historical location of the Mahāvihāra, drawn by a British civil servant

Several scholars have contended that the prominence of certain of the Buddha's disciples in the early texts is indicative of the preference of the compilers. Buddhologist Jean Przyluski argued that Upāli's prominence in the Pāli texts is indicative of the preference of the Sthaviravādins for vinaya above discourse, whereas the prominence of Ānanda in the Mūlasarvāstivāda texts is indicative of their preference for discourse above vinaya.[47][48] This preference of the compilers has also affected how Ānanda addresses Upāli. In many of the early discourses Upāli has little to no role, and he is not mentioned among many early lists of significant disciples. He is, however, frequently mentioned in lists in the Vinaya-piṭaka, which proves the point. Upāli seems to obtain a much more significant role with the end of the Buddha's life.[49] Przyluski's theory, which was further developed by Buddhologist André Migot, regarded Mahākassapa (Sanskrit: Mahākāśyapa), Upāli and Anuruddha (Sanskrit: Aniruddha) as part of the second period in the compiling of the early texts (4th to early 3rd century BCE) that emphasized moral discipline, associated with these disciples, as well as the city of Vesālī (Sanskrit: Vaiśalī).[note 2] In this period, these disciples' roles and stories were emphasized and embellished more than other disciples.[51] These differences in schools gradually developed and became stereotyped over time.[52]

Upāli's successors formed a lineage called the vinayadharas, or the 'custodians of the vinaya'.[53][54] Vinayadharas were monks who in early Buddhist texts were particularly known for their mastery and strictness with regard to the vinaya. In 4th–5th-century Ceylon, they then came to be associated with a lineage of such masters, because of the influence of Buddhaghosa, who established Upāli and the other vinayadharas as an important characteristic of the Mahāvihāra tradition. This concept of a vinayadhara lineage also affected Burma, and led to a belief that only those ordained in the proper lineage could become vinayadharas. Gradually, the vinayadhara came to be seen a sign of superior tradition, as the lineage was integrated with local history. Even later, the vinayadhara became a formal position of judge and arbitrator in problems of vinaya.[55]

Upāli's lineage has gained scholarly attention because of their way of timekeeping, known by modern scholars as the "dotted record". Chinese sources say that Upāli and his successors had a custom to insert a dot in a manuscript marking each year after the First Council. The sources claim that each of successors continued this tradition, up until 489 CE, when the Sarvāstivāda scholar Saṃghabhadra entered the last dot in the manuscript. This tradition has been used by some modern scholars to calculate the passing away of the Buddha, but has now been debunked as historically unlikely. Still, data pertaining to the vinayadharas is used to support theories regarding the dating of the Buddha's life and death, such as the one proposed by Indologist Richard Gombrich.[56]

 
The Chinese Vinaya school founded by Tao-hsüan saw themselves as the continuation of Upāli's lineage (ICP, Nara National Museum)

Not only in ancient India did certain lineages identify with Upāli. In 7th-century China, the Vinaya or Nan-shan School was founded by the monks Ku-hsin and Tao-hsüan, seen as a continuation of Upāli's lineage. The school emphasized restoring and propagating the vinaya and became popular in the Pa Hwa Hills of Nanking. It developed a standard for teaching the vinaya. The monks would wear black and emphasized protecting oneself against error. It was believed at the time that Ku-hsin was a reincarnation of Upāli.[57]

Texts edit

In the Pāli tradition, numerous discourses show the Buddha and Upāli discussing matters of monastic discipline, including the legality of decision-making and assemblies, and the system of giving warnings and probation. Much of this is found in the Parivāra, a late vinaya text.[19] Bareau has suggested the conversation between the Buddha and Upāli about schisms was the origin of the traditions about this subject in the Vinayapiṭaka.[58] In the vinaya texts of the Sarvastivāda tradition, the Uttragrantha[59] and the 5th-century Mahāyāna-inspired Upalipariprccha[60] feature similar to almost the same questions as the Pāli Pārivāra,[61] although the suggestion that the latter originates from a no longer extant Pāli text has not been proven.[62] The Turkistan Sanskrit version of the Uttragrantha, on the other hand, does not match the Pāli at all.[61] With regard to these lists of questions, it is unknown which of these questions are from Upāli, and which were attributed to him because of his reputation.[19] Apart from these technical discussions, there is also a teaching given by Upāli referred to in the Pāli Milindapañhā.[19] Religion scholar Charles Prebish has named the Upalipariprccha as one of twenty-two texts worthy of study and practice, in order to develop American Buddhist ethics.[63]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Philosopher Michael Freedman argues that the office of preceptor may have only been developed after the Buddha's parinibbāna, although he admits the texts contradict each other with regard to Upāli's acceptance.[21]
  2. ^ Although Przyluski connected this with the city of Kosambī (Sanskrit: Kauśambī) instead.[50]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Ray 1994, pp. 205–206 note 2a–d.
  2. ^ Freedman 1977, pp. 67, 231.
  3. ^ Rhys Davids 1899, p. 102.
  4. ^ Gombrich 1995, p. 357.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Mrozik 2004.
  6. ^ Bareau 1962, p. 262.
  7. ^ See Malalasekera (1937, Upāli). For the texts of traditions apart from Pāli, see Freedman (1977, p. 97).
  8. ^ a b Freedman 1977, p. 117.
  9. ^ a b Bareau 1988, p. 76.
  10. ^ Freedman 1977, p. 116.
  11. ^ Rahula 1978, p. 10.
  12. ^ Rhys Davids 1903, p. 69.
  13. ^ Schumann 2004, p. 166.
  14. ^ Samuels 2007, p. 123.
  15. ^ Singh 1973, pp. 131–132.
  16. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Upāli; Vālikārāma.
  17. ^ Geiger 1912, p. 35.
  18. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Upāli; Upāli Sutta (3).
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Malalasekera 1937, Upāli.
  20. ^ Freedman 1977, p. 58.
  21. ^ Freedman 1977, pp. 57 n.60, 97–98.
  22. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Kappitaka Thera.
  23. ^ Dhammadinna 2016, pp. 45–46.
  24. ^ Sarao 2004, p. 878.
  25. ^ Robinson & Johnson 1997, p. 45.
  26. ^ Baroni 2002, p. 365.
  27. ^ Sarao 2003, p. 4.
  28. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Kumāra-Kassapa; Ramanīyavihārī Thera.
  29. ^ See Malalasekera (1937, Ajjuka; Bharukaccha). For the other laypeople, see Churn Law (2000, p. 464).
  30. ^ See Huxley (2010, p. 278). Freedman (1977, pp. 30–32) mentions faith, the son seeing Ānanda, and the accusation of false monkhood.
  31. ^ Freedman 1977, p. 32.
  32. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Ajjuka.
  33. ^ Malalasekera 1961.
  34. ^ Huxley 2010, p. 278.
  35. ^ a b Prebish 2008, p. 9.
  36. ^ Geiger 1912, p. xlviii.
  37. ^ For the pāṭimokkha, see Norman (1983, pp. 7–12). For the vinaya of both monks and nuns, see Oldenberg (1899, pp. 617–618) and Norman (1983, p. 18).
  38. ^ Eliade 1982, pp. 210–211.
  39. ^ Thomas 1951, p. 28.
  40. ^ See Analayo (2010, p. 17 note 52). For the Mahāsaṃghika, see Analayo (2016, p. 160).
  41. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Rājagaha.
  42. ^ Norman 2005, p. 37.
  43. ^ See Huxley (1996, p. 126 note 27) and Malalasekera (1937, Upāli). Huxley mentions the question raised.
  44. ^ a b Cutler 1997, p. 66.
  45. ^ Malalasekera 1937, Hsuan Tsang.
  46. ^ Strong 1992, p. 240.
  47. ^ Freedman 1977, pp. 13, 464–465.
  48. ^ Przyluski 1923, pp. 22–23.
  49. ^ Freedman 1977, pp. 34–35, 88–89, 110.
  50. ^ Przyluski 1923, p. 184.
  51. ^ Migot 1954, pp. 540–541.
  52. ^ Dutt 1925, pp. 206–207.
  53. ^ Sarao 2003, p. 3.
  54. ^ Prebish 2008, p. 2.
  55. ^ Frasch 1996, pp. 2–4, 12, 14.
  56. ^ See Prebish (2008, pp. 6–8) and Geiger (1912, p. xlvii).
  57. ^ For Ku-hsin, the Pa Hwa Hills, the standard and the reincarnation, see Hsiang-Kuang (1956, p. 207). For Tao-hsüan and the monks, see Bapat (1956, pp. 126–127).
  58. ^ Ray 1994, p. 169.
  59. ^ Thomas 1951, p. 268.
  60. ^ For the Mahāyāna influence, see Prebish (2010, p. 305) For the time period, see Agostini (2004, p. 80 n.42).
  61. ^ a b Norman 1983, p. 29.
  62. ^ Heirman 2004, p. 377.
  63. ^ Prebish 2000, pp. 56–57: "... texts worthy of new consideration would also include those with the richest heritage of ethical underpinnings."

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  • Rhys Davids, T.W. (1903), Buddhism: A Sketch of the Life and Teachings of Gautama, the Buddha (PDF), Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, OCLC 870507941
  • Robinson, R.H.; Johnson, W.L. (1997), The Buddhist Religion: A Historical Introduction (4th ed.), Cengage, ISBN 978-0-534-20718-2
  • Samuels, J. (January 2007), "Buddhism and Caste in India and Sri Lanka", Religion Compass, 1 (1): 120–130, doi:10.1111/j.1749-8171.2006.00013.x
  • Sarao, K.T.S. (2003), "The Ācariyaparamparā and Date of the Buddha", Indian Historical Review, 30 (1–2): 1–12, doi:10.1177/037698360303000201, S2CID 141897826
  • Sarao, K.T.S. (2004), "Upali", in Jestice, P.G. (ed.), Holy People of the World: A Cross-cultural Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, p. 878, ISBN 1-85109-649-3
  • Schumann, H.W. (2004) [1982], Der Historische Buddha [The Historical Buddha] (in German), translated by Walshe, M. O' C., Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1817-0
  • Singh, Sangh Sen (1973), "The Problem of Leadership in Early Buddhism", Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 34: 131–139, ISSN 2249-1937, JSTOR 44138606
  • Strong, J.S. (1992), The Legend and Cult of Upagupta: Sanskrit Buddhism in North India and Southeast Asia, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-07389-9
  • Thomas, Edward J. (1951), The History Of Buddhist Thought (2nd ed.), Routledge, OCLC 923624252

External links edit

  • Upāli, hosted by What Buddha Said
  • Buddhist Studies: Disciples of the Buddha: Upāli (student version), hosted by Buddhanet

upāli, 18th, century, founder, siyam, nikaya, upali, thera, sanskrit, pāli, monk, chief, disciples, buddha, according, early, buddhist, texts, person, charge, reciting, reviewing, monastic, discipline, pāli, sanskrit, vinaya, first, buddhist, council, belongs,. For the 18th Century founder of the Siyam Nikaya see Upali Thera Upali Sanskrit and Pali was a monk one of the ten chief disciples of the Buddha 1 and according to early Buddhist texts the person in charge of the reciting and reviewing of monastic discipline Pali and Sanskrit vinaya on the First Buddhist Council Upali belongs to the barber community He met the Buddha when still a child and later when the Sakya princes received ordination he did so as well He was ordained before the princes putting humility before caste Having been ordained Upali learnt both Buddhist doctrine Pali Dhamma Sanskrit Dharma and vinaya His preceptor was Kappitaka Upali became known for his mastery and strictness of vinaya and was consulted often about vinaya matters A notable case he decided was that of the monk Ajjuka who was accused of partisanship in a conflict about real estate During the First Council Upali received the important role of reciting the vinaya for which he is mostly known ElderUpaliUpali Bodh Gaya IndiaPersonalReligionBuddhismSchoolall but mostly discussed in Pali BuddhismLineageVinayadharaKnown forExpertise in monastic discipline reviewed monastic discipline during the First CouncilOther names repository of the discipline Pali Vinaye agganikkhitto foremost in discipline Pali Vinaya pamokkha Senior postingTeacherThe Buddha KappitakaPeriod in officeEarly BuddhismSuccessorDasakaStudents Sattarasavaggiya DasakaInitiationAnupiyaby the BuddhaScholars have analyzed Upali s role and that of other disciples in the early texts and it has been suggested that his role in the texts was emphasized during a period of compiling that stressed monastic discipline during which Mahakassapa Sanskrit Mahakasyapa and Upali became the most important disciples Later Upali and his pupils became known as vinayadharas Pali custodians of the vinaya who preserved the monastic discipline after the Buddha s parinibbana Sanskrit parinirvaṇa passing into final Nirvana This lineage became an important part of the identity of Ceylonese and Burmese Buddhism In China the 7th century Vinaya school referred to Upali as their patriarch and it was believed that one of their founders was a reincarnation of him The technical conversations about vinaya between the Buddha and Upali were recorded in the Pali and Sarvastivada traditions and have been suggested as an important subject of study for modern day ethics in American Buddhism Contents 1 Accounts 1 1 Early life 1 2 Monastic life 1 3 Role in monastic discipline 1 4 First Council and death 1 5 Previous lives 2 Legacy 2 1 Schools and lineages 2 2 Texts 3 Notes 4 Citations 5 References 6 External linksAccounts editUpali s personality is not depicted extensively in the texts as the texts mostly emphasize his stereotypical qualities as an expert in monastic discipline especially so in the Pali texts 2 Early life edit According to the texts Upali was a barber a despised profession in ancient India 3 4 He was from an artisan caste family in service to the Sakya princes in Kapilavatthu Sanskrit Sakya Kapilavastu and according to the Mahavastu to the Buddha Upali s mother had once introduced Upali to the Buddha 5 The Mahavastu Dharmaguptaka and Chinese texts relate that as a child Upali shaved the hair of the Buddha Unlike adults he had no fear of approaching the Buddha Once as he was guided by the Buddha during the shaving he attained advanced states of meditation Buddhologist Andre Bareau argues that this story is ancient because it precedes the tradition of art depictions of the Buddha with curly hair and the glorification of Upali as an adult 6 According to the Mahavastu the Pali Cullavagga and the texts of discipline of the Mulasarvastivada order when the princes left home to become monks Upali followed them Since the princes handed Upali all their possessions including jewelry he worried that returning to Kapilavatthu with these possessions might cause him to be accused of having killed the princes for theft Upali therefore decided to become ordained with them They were ordained by the Buddha at the Anupiya grove 7 Several variations on the story of Upali s ordination exist but all of them emphasize that his status in the saṅgha Sanskrit saṃgha monastic community was independent of his caste origin In the Pali version the princes including Anuruddha Sanskrit Aniruddha voluntarily allowed Upali to ordain before them in order to give him seniority in order of ordination and abandon their own attachment to caste and social status 8 nbsp Remains at Tilaurakot one of the two sites that may have been KapilavatthuIn the Tibetan Mulasarvastivada version of the story co disciple Sariputta Sanskrit Sariputra persuaded Upali to become ordained when he hesitated because of being low caste but in the Mahavastu it was Upali s own initiative 8 5 The Mahavastu continues that after all the monks had been ordained the Buddha requested that the former princes bow for their former barber which led to consternation among the witnessing king Bimbisara and advisers who also bowed for Upali following their example 9 It became widely known that the Sakyans had their barber ordained before them to humble their pride 10 as the Buddha related a Jataka tale that the king and advisers had bowed for Upali in a previous life too 9 11 Indologist T W Rhys Davids noted that Upali was the striking proof of the reality of the effect produced by Gautama s disregard of the supposed importance of caste 12 Historian H W Schumann also raises Upali as an example of the general rule that in no case did humble origins prevent a monk from becoming prominent in the Order 13 Religion scholar Jeffrey Samuels points out though that the majority of Buddhist monks and nuns during the time of the Buddha as drawn from several analyses of Buddhist texts were from higher castes with a minority of six percent like Upali being exception to the rule 14 Historian Sangh Sen Singh argues that Upali could have been the leader of the saṅgha after the Buddha s parinibbana instead of Mahakassapa Sanskrit parinirvaṇa Mahakasyapa But the fact that he was from a low caste effectively prevented this as many of the Buddhist devotees at the time might have objected to his leadership position 15 Monastic life edit Upali had a dwelling place in Vesali Sanskrit Vaisali called Valikarama 16 17 He once asked the Buddha for leave to withdraw in the forest and lead a life in solitude The Buddha refused however and told him that such a life was not for everyone Pali scholar Gunapala Malalasekera argued that the Buddha wanted Upali to learn both meditation and Buddhist doctrine and a life in the forest would have provided him with only the former The texts state that the Buddha himself taught the vinaya monastic discipline to Upali 18 Upali later attained the state of an enlightened disciple 5 19 According to the Mahavastu the preceptor who completed the process of Upali s acceptance in the saṅgha was a monk called Kappitaka 20 note 1 There is one story told about Upali and his preceptor Kappitaka was in the habit of living in cemeteries In one cemetery near Vesali he had a monastic cell One day a couple of nuns built a small monument there in honor of their teacher also a nun and made much noise in the process Disturbed by the nuns Kappitaka destroyed the monument which greatly angered the nuns Later in an attempt to kill Kappitaka they destroyed his cell in return But Kappitaka was warned by Upali in advance and he had already fled elsewhere 22 The next day Upali was verbally abused by the nuns for having informed his teacher 23 Role in monastic discipline edit nbsp Upali woodblock print by Munakata Shikō originally from 1939In the literature of every Buddhist school Upali is depicted as an expert in vinaya and the paṭimokkha Sanskrit pratimokṣa monastic code 5 for which the Buddha declared him foremost among those who remember the vinaya Pali Vinaya pamokkha Sanskrit Vinayapramukkha 24 25 He was therefore dubbed the repository of the discipline Pali Vinaye agganikkhitto 19 In some schools he is also seen as an expert in the precepts of a bodhisatta Sanskrit bodhisattva Buddha to be 5 5th century commentator Buddhaghosa stated that Upali drew up instructions and explanatory notes for monks dealing with disciplinary matters 19 Upali was also known for his strictness in practicing the discipline 26 Monks considered it a privilege to study the vinaya under him 27 At times monks who felt repentance and wanted to improve themselves sought his advice In other cases Upali was consulted in making decisions considering alleged offenses of monastic discipline For example one newly ordained nun was found pregnant and was judged by the monk Devadatta as unfit to be a nun However the Buddha had Upali do a second investigation during which Upali called upon the help of the laywoman Visakha and several other laypeople Eventually Upali concluded the nun had conceived the child by her husband before her ordination as a nun and therefore was innocent The Buddha later praised Upali for his careful consideration of this matter 28 Other notable cases about which Upali decided are that of the monks Bharukaccha and Ajjuka Bharukaccha consulted Upali whether dreaming about having sex with a woman amounted to an offense that required disrobing and Upali judged it did not As for the monk Ajjuka he had decided about a dispute about real estate 29 In this case a rich householder was in doubt as to who he should will his inheritance to his pious nephew or his own son He asked Ajjuka to invite for an audience the person who had the most faith of the two Ajjuka invited the nephew Angry about the decision the son accused Ajjuka of partisanship and went to see the monk Ananda Ananda disagreed with Ajjuka s decision judging the son the more rightful heir and causing the son to feel justified in accusing Ajjuka of not being a true monk When Upali got involved however he judged in favor of Ajjuka He pointed out to Ananda that the act of inviting a layperson did not break monastic discipline 30 Eventually Ananda agreed with Upali and Upali was able to settle the issue 31 32 Here too the Buddha praised Upali for his handling of the case 33 Law scholar Andrew Huxley noted that Upali s judgment of this case allowed monks to engage on an ethical level with the world whereas Ananda s judgment did not 34 First Council and death edit nbsp The First Council Mural painting in the Nava Jetavana temple Jetavana Park Uttar Pradesh India late 20th centuryAccording to the chronicles Upali had been ordained or was aged 35 forty four years at the time of the First Buddhist Council 36 At the council Upali was asked to recite the vinaya of monks and nuns including the paṭimokkha 37 and the Vinayapiṭaka collection of texts on monastic discipline was compiled based thereon 38 Specifically Upali was asked about each rule issued by the Buddha as to what it was about where it was issued with regard to whom the formulation of the rule itself derived secondary rules and the conditions under which the rule was broken 39 According to the Mahasaṃghika account of the First Council Upali was the one who charged Ananda the former attendant of the Buddha with several offenses of wrongdoing 40 Upali had a number of pupils who were called the sattarasavaggiya 41 Upali and his pupils were entrusted with the safekeeping and reciting of this collection of monastic discipline 42 Sixteen years after the Buddha s passing away Upali ordained a pupil called Dasaka who would become his successor with regard to expertise in monastic discipline According to the late Pali Dipavaṃsa Upali died at the age of seventy four if this age is interpreted as life span not years of ordination 35 Previous lives edit In some Buddhist texts an explanation is offered why a low caste born monk would have such a central role in developing monastic law The question that might have been raised is whether issuing laws would not normally be associated with kings The Apadana explains this by relating that Upali had been an all powerful wheel turning king for thousand previous lives and a king of the deities in another thousand lives 43 Before that the texts say he was born during the age of Padumuttara Buddha and met one of that Buddha s disciples who was foremost in monastic discipline Upali aspired to be like him and pursued it through doing merits 19 44 Despite Upali s previous lives as a king he was born as a low caste barber in the time of Gotama Buddha This is also explained in an Apadana story in a previous life Upali insulted a paccekabuddha Sanskrit pratyekabuddha a type of Buddha The evil karma brought about low birth 19 44 Legacy editUpali was the focus of worship in ancient and medieval India and was regarded as the patron saint of monks who specialize in the vinaya 5 45 He is one of the eight enlightened disciples and is honored in Burmese ceremonies 5 46 Schools and lineages edit nbsp 1890 map showing the historical location of the Mahavihara drawn by a British civil servantSeveral scholars have contended that the prominence of certain of the Buddha s disciples in the early texts is indicative of the preference of the compilers Buddhologist Jean Przyluski argued that Upali s prominence in the Pali texts is indicative of the preference of the Sthaviravadins for vinaya above discourse whereas the prominence of Ananda in the Mulasarvastivada texts is indicative of their preference for discourse above vinaya 47 48 This preference of the compilers has also affected how Ananda addresses Upali In many of the early discourses Upali has little to no role and he is not mentioned among many early lists of significant disciples He is however frequently mentioned in lists in the Vinaya piṭaka which proves the point Upali seems to obtain a much more significant role with the end of the Buddha s life 49 Przyluski s theory which was further developed by Buddhologist Andre Migot regarded Mahakassapa Sanskrit Mahakasyapa Upali and Anuruddha Sanskrit Aniruddha as part of the second period in the compiling of the early texts 4th to early 3rd century BCE that emphasized moral discipline associated with these disciples as well as the city of Vesali Sanskrit Vaisali note 2 In this period these disciples roles and stories were emphasized and embellished more than other disciples 51 These differences in schools gradually developed and became stereotyped over time 52 Upali s successors formed a lineage called the vinayadharas or the custodians of the vinaya 53 54 Vinayadharas were monks who in early Buddhist texts were particularly known for their mastery and strictness with regard to the vinaya In 4th 5th century Ceylon they then came to be associated with a lineage of such masters because of the influence of Buddhaghosa who established Upali and the other vinayadharas as an important characteristic of the Mahavihara tradition This concept of a vinayadhara lineage also affected Burma and led to a belief that only those ordained in the proper lineage could become vinayadharas Gradually the vinayadhara came to be seen a sign of superior tradition as the lineage was integrated with local history Even later the vinayadhara became a formal position of judge and arbitrator in problems of vinaya 55 Upali s lineage has gained scholarly attention because of their way of timekeeping known by modern scholars as the dotted record Chinese sources say that Upali and his successors had a custom to insert a dot in a manuscript marking each year after the First Council The sources claim that each of successors continued this tradition up until 489 CE when the Sarvastivada scholar Saṃghabhadra entered the last dot in the manuscript This tradition has been used by some modern scholars to calculate the passing away of the Buddha but has now been debunked as historically unlikely Still data pertaining to the vinayadharas is used to support theories regarding the dating of the Buddha s life and death such as the one proposed by Indologist Richard Gombrich 56 nbsp The Chinese Vinaya school founded by Tao hsuan saw themselves as the continuation of Upali s lineage ICP Nara National Museum Not only in ancient India did certain lineages identify with Upali In 7th century China the Vinaya or Nan shan School was founded by the monks Ku hsin and Tao hsuan seen as a continuation of Upali s lineage The school emphasized restoring and propagating the vinaya and became popular in the Pa Hwa Hills of Nanking It developed a standard for teaching the vinaya The monks would wear black and emphasized protecting oneself against error It was believed at the time that Ku hsin was a reincarnation of Upali 57 Texts edit In the Pali tradition numerous discourses show the Buddha and Upali discussing matters of monastic discipline including the legality of decision making and assemblies and the system of giving warnings and probation Much of this is found in the Parivara a late vinaya text 19 Bareau has suggested the conversation between the Buddha and Upali about schisms was the origin of the traditions about this subject in the Vinayapiṭaka 58 In the vinaya texts of the Sarvastivada tradition the Uttragrantha 59 and the 5th century Mahayana inspired Upalipariprccha 60 feature similar to almost the same questions as the Pali Parivara 61 although the suggestion that the latter originates from a no longer extant Pali text has not been proven 62 The Turkistan Sanskrit version of the Uttragrantha on the other hand does not match the Pali at all 61 With regard to these lists of questions it is unknown which of these questions are from Upali and which were attributed to him because of his reputation 19 Apart from these technical discussions there is also a teaching given by Upali referred to in the Pali Milindapanha 19 Religion scholar Charles Prebish has named the Upalipariprccha as one of twenty two texts worthy of study and practice in order to develop American Buddhist ethics 63 Notes edit Philosopher Michael Freedman argues that the office of preceptor may have only been developed after the Buddha s parinibbana although he admits the texts contradict each other with regard to Upali s acceptance 21 Although Przyluski connected this with the city of Kosambi Sanskrit Kausambi instead 50 Citations edit Ray 1994 pp 205 206 note 2a d Freedman 1977 pp 67 231 Rhys Davids 1899 p 102 Gombrich 1995 p 357 a b c d e f g Mrozik 2004 Bareau 1962 p 262 See Malalasekera 1937 Upali For the texts of traditions apart from Pali see Freedman 1977 p 97 a b Freedman 1977 p 117 a b Bareau 1988 p 76 Freedman 1977 p 116 Rahula 1978 p 10 Rhys Davids 1903 p 69 Schumann 2004 p 166 Samuels 2007 p 123 Singh 1973 pp 131 132 Malalasekera 1937 Upali Valikarama Geiger 1912 p 35 Malalasekera 1937 Upali Upali Sutta 3 a b c d e f g h Malalasekera 1937 Upali Freedman 1977 p 58 Freedman 1977 pp 57 n 60 97 98 Malalasekera 1937 Kappitaka Thera Dhammadinna 2016 pp 45 46 Sarao 2004 p 878 Robinson amp Johnson 1997 p 45 Baroni 2002 p 365 Sarao 2003 p 4 Malalasekera 1937 Kumara Kassapa Ramaniyavihari Thera See Malalasekera 1937 Ajjuka Bharukaccha For the other laypeople see Churn Law 2000 p 464 See Huxley 2010 p 278 Freedman 1977 pp 30 32 mentions faith the son seeing Ananda and the accusation of false monkhood Freedman 1977 p 32 Malalasekera 1937 Ajjuka Malalasekera 1961 Huxley 2010 p 278 a b Prebish 2008 p 9 Geiger 1912 p xlviii For the paṭimokkha see Norman 1983 pp 7 12 For the vinaya of both monks and nuns see Oldenberg 1899 pp 617 618 and Norman 1983 p 18 Eliade 1982 pp 210 211 Thomas 1951 p 28 See Analayo 2010 p 17 note 52 For the Mahasaṃghika see Analayo 2016 p 160 Malalasekera 1937 Rajagaha Norman 2005 p 37 See Huxley 1996 p 126 note 27 and Malalasekera 1937 Upali Huxley mentions the question raised a b Cutler 1997 p 66 Malalasekera 1937 Hsuan Tsang Strong 1992 p 240 Freedman 1977 pp 13 464 465 Przyluski 1923 pp 22 23 Freedman 1977 pp 34 35 88 89 110 Przyluski 1923 p 184 Migot 1954 pp 540 541 Dutt 1925 pp 206 207 Sarao 2003 p 3 Prebish 2008 p 2 Frasch 1996 pp 2 4 12 14 See Prebish 2008 pp 6 8 and Geiger 1912 p xlvii For Ku hsin the Pa Hwa Hills the standard and the reincarnation see Hsiang Kuang 1956 p 207 For Tao hsuan and the monks see Bapat 1956 pp 126 127 Ray 1994 p 169 Thomas 1951 p 268 For the Mahayana influence see Prebish 2010 p 305 For the time period see Agostini 2004 p 80 n 42 a b Norman 1983 p 29 Heirman 2004 p 377 Prebish 2000 pp 56 57 texts worthy of new consideration would also include those with the richest heritage of ethical underpinnings References editAgostini G 2004 Buddhist Sources on Feticide as Distinct from Homicide Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 27 1 63 95 archived from the original on 24 August 2019 Analayo B 2010 Once Again on Bakkula PDF The Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies 11 1 28 archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2020 Analayo B 2016 The Foundation History of the Nuns Order PDF projekt verlag ISBN 978 3 89733 387 1 archived PDF from the original on 8 December 2018 Bapat P 1956 2500 Years of Buddhism Ministry of Information and Broadcasting India OCLC 851201287 Bareau A 1962 La construction et le culte des stupa d apres les Vinayapiṭaka The Construction and Cult of the Stupa after the Vinayapiṭaka PDF Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient in French 50 2 229 274 doi 10 3406 befeo 1962 1534 permanent dead link Bareau A 1988 Les debuts de la predication du Buddha selon l Ekottara Agama The beginnings of the preaching of the Buddha according to the Ekottara Agama Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient in French 77 1 69 96 doi 10 3406 befeo 1988 1742 Baroni Helen J 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Zen Buddhism Rosen Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8239 2240 6 Churn Law B 2000 A History of Pali literature 2nd ed Indica Books ISBN 81 86569 18 9 Cutler S M 1997 Still Suffering After All These Aeons The Continuing Effects of the Buddha s Bad Karma in Connolly P Hamilton S eds Indian Insights Buddhism Brahmanism and Bhakti Papers From the Annual Spalding Symposium on Indian Religions Luzac Oriental pp 63 82 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 695 45 ISBN 1 898942 15 3 Dhammadinna B 2016 The Funeral of Mahaprajapati Gautami and Her Followers in the Mulasarvastivada Vinaya The Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies 17 25 74 ISSN 0972 4893 archived from the original on 2 March 2020 Dutt N 1925 Early History of the Spread of Buddhism and the Buddhist Schools PDF Luzac amp Co OCLC 659567197 Eliade Mircea 1982 Histoire des croyances et des idees religieuses Vol 2 De Gautama Bouddha au triomphe du christianisme A history of religious ideas From Gautama Buddha to the Triumph of Christianity in French University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 20403 0 Freedman M June 1977 The Characterization of Ananda in the Pali Canon of the Theravada A Hagiographic Study PDF PhD thesis McMaster University archived from the original on 19 September 2018 Frasch T 1996 An Eminent Buddhist Tradition The Burmese Vinayadharas Traditions in Current Perspective Proceedings of the Conference on Myanmar and Southeast Asian Studies 15 17 November 1995 Yangon OCLC 835531460 archived from the original on 7 March 2020 Geiger W 1912 Mahavaṃsa Great Chronicle of Ceylon Pali Text Society OCLC 1049619613 Gombrich R F 1995 Buddhist Precept and Practice Traditional Buddhism in the Rural Highlands of Ceylon Kegan Paul Trench and Company ISBN 978 0 7103 0444 5 Heirman A 2004 The Chinese Samantapasadika and its school affiliation Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 154 2 371 396 JSTOR 43381401 Hsiang Kuang C 1956 A History of Chinese Buddhism Indo Chinese Literature Publications OCLC 553968893 Huxley A 1996 The Vinaya Legal System or Performance Enhancing Drug PDF The Buddhist Forum vol 4 School of Oriental and African Studies pp 1994 1996 ISBN 978 1 135 75181 4 archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2015 Huxley A 23 June 2010 Hpo Hlaing on Buddhist Law Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 73 2 269 283 doi 10 1017 S0041977X10000364 S2CID 154570006 Malalasekera G P 1937 Dictionary of Pali Proper Names Pali Text Society OCLC 837021145 Malalasekera G P ed 1961 Ajjuka Encyclopaedia of Buddhism vol 1 Government of Sri Lanka p 333 OCLC 2863845613 Migot A 1954 Un grand disciple du Buddha Sariputra Son role dans l histoire du bouddhisme et dans le developpement de l Abhidharma A Great Disciple of the Buddha Sariputra His Role in Buddhist History and in the Development of Abhidharma PDF Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient in French 46 2 405 554 doi 10 3406 befeo 1954 5607 Mrozik S 2004 Upali MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism vol 1 MacMillan Reference USA pp 870 871 ISBN 0 02 865719 5 Norman K R 1983 Pali Literature Otto Harrassowitz ISBN 3 447 02285 X Norman K R 2005 Buddhist Forum Volume V Philological Approach to Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 75154 8 Oldenberg H 1899 Buddhistische Studien Buddhist Studies Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 53 4 613 694 ISSN 0341 0137 JSTOR 43366938 Prebish C S 2000 From Monastic Ethics to Modern Society in Keown D ed Contemporary Buddhist Ethics Curzon pp 37 56 ISBN 0 7007 1278 X Prebish C S 2008 Cooking the Buddhist Books The Implications of the New Dating of the Buddha for the History of Early Indian Buddhism Journal of Buddhist Ethics 15 1 21 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 693 1275 Prebish C S 2010 Buddhism A Modern Perspective Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 03803 2 Przyluski J 1923 La legende de l empereur Acoka The Legend of Emperor Asoka PDF in French Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner OCLC 2753753 Rahula T 1978 A Critical Study of the Mahavastu Motilal Banarsidass OCLC 5680748 Ray R A 1994 Buddhist Saints in India A Study in Buddhist Values and Orientations Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 507202 2 Rhys Davids T W 1899 Dialogues of the Buddha PDF vol 1 Pali Text Society OCLC 17787096 Rhys Davids T W 1903 Buddhism A Sketch of the Life and Teachings of Gautama the Buddha PDF Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge OCLC 870507941 Robinson R H Johnson W L 1997 The Buddhist Religion A Historical Introduction 4th ed Cengage ISBN 978 0 534 20718 2 Samuels J January 2007 Buddhism and Caste in India and Sri Lanka Religion Compass 1 1 120 130 doi 10 1111 j 1749 8171 2006 00013 x Sarao K T S 2003 The Acariyaparampara and Date of the Buddha Indian Historical Review 30 1 2 1 12 doi 10 1177 037698360303000201 S2CID 141897826 Sarao K T S 2004 Upali in Jestice P G ed Holy People of the World A Cross cultural Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 878 ISBN 1 85109 649 3 Schumann H W 2004 1982 Der Historische Buddha The Historical Buddha in German translated by Walshe M O C Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1817 0 Singh Sangh Sen 1973 The Problem of Leadership in Early Buddhism Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 34 131 139 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44138606 Strong J S 1992 The Legend and Cult of Upagupta Sanskrit Buddhism in North India and Southeast Asia Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 07389 9 Thomas Edward J 1951 The History Of Buddhist Thought 2nd ed Routledge OCLC 923624252External links editUpali hosted by What Buddha Said Buddhist Studies Disciples of the Buddha Upali student version hosted by Buddhanet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Upali amp oldid 1174376748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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