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Lumbinī

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
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Lumbinī was a nature reserve between the towns of Kapilavatthu and Devadaha and was where Siddhattha Gotama, who later became the Buddha, was born. Mahā Māyā,his mother, was on her way to Devadaha to have her baby when the birth pangs began and the child was born in Lumbinī instead. In later centuries Lumbinī became an important centre of pilgrimage and remained so until at least the beginning of the 14th century. After the disappearance of Buddhism in India, Lumbinī was gradually overgrown by jungle and was only rediscovered in 1896. Today the place is located just within the border of Nepal. The most important monument at Lumbinī is a huge stone pillar with an inscription by King Aśoka saying that he visited the place in the year 249 BCE. The inscription reads: ‘Twenty years after his coronation King Aśoka visited this place and worshipped because here the Buddha, the sage of the Sākyans, was born. He had a stone figure and a pillar set up because the Lord was born here and the village was exempted from tax and required to pay only one eighth of the produce.’

The Places where Siddhartha Trod; Lumbini and Kapliavastu, Max Deeg, 2003.

Source

www.buddhisma2z.com