Dandapāni

Dandapani was an ancient Indian king from the Koliya dynasty, who ruled a city called Koli.[1] He was born in Devadaha as a Koliya Prince, as one of the sons of Añjana and Yasodharā.[2] His brother was Suppabuddha and his sisters Māyā and Pajāpatī. He was the Buddha's maternal uncle.

Dandapāni

Life

According to northern sources the Prince Siddhartha's wife was Dandapani's brother's (King Suppabuddha's) daughter.it is said Suppabuddha and Dandapani and devdatta offer fish and seafood while marrying yashodhara to buddha but buddha and shonda get angry about it and all of them apologize to buddha. In history, it is recorded that when Dandapānī met with and questioned Buddha on his teachings in Kapilavastu. The Buddha explained the teachings to him, but he was not satisfied, and went away "shaking his head, wagging his tongue, with his brow puckered into three wrinkles".

Buddhaghosa says that he received his name from the fact of his always being seen with a golden walking-stick and was a follower of Devadatta.

Other

Dandapani is also one of the name of Hindu war God, Kartikeya.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.