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Difference between revisions of "Sects & Sectarianism. The Origin of the three existing Vinaya lineages: Theravada, Dharmaguptaka, and Mulasarvastivada"

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m (Text replacement - "Central Asia" to "{{Wiki|Central Asia}}")
m (Text replacement - "fundamental principle " to "fundamental principle ")
 
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[[File:1730034.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:1730034.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
One of the central questions in the revival of the [[bhikkhuni]] [[lineage]] from the [[Theravādin]] perspective is the validity of ordination [[lineages]] in other schools. The [[traditional]] [[Theravādin]] [[view]] would have it that the [[bhikkhunis]] in [[existence]] today are ‘[[Mahāyāna]]’. [[Mahāyāna]] is believed to have descended from the [[Mahāsaṅghika]] school. According to the earliest Sri Lankan chronicle, the [[Dīpavaṁsa]], the [[Mahāsaṅghikas]] are none other than the ‘evil’ [[Vajjiputtakas]], who advocated the use of [[money]] by [[monks]], and who were defeated at the [[Second Council]], but who later reformed and made a new recitation. Hence the [[Mahāyāna]] is representative of a [[tradition]] whose fundamental principle was {{Wiki|laxity}} in [[Vinaya]]. The [[Dīpavaṁsa]] states that the other 17 schools apart from the [[Theravāda]] are schismatic and ‘thorns’ in the [[sāsana]]. It is therefore impossible to accept them as part of the same communion.
+
One of the central questions in the revival of the [[bhikkhuni lineage]] from the [[Theravādin]] {{Wiki|perspective}} is the validity of [[ordination lineages]] in other schools.  
  
But the [[reality]] is that there has never been a distinctively ‘[[Mahāyāna]]’ [[Vinaya]] or ordination [[lineage]]. Rather, some [[bhikkhus]] and [[bhikkhunis]], having [[ordained]] in one of the [[lineages]] of the [[early schools]], choose to study and practice certain texts and [[ethical]] ideals known as ‘[[Mahāyāna]]’. The [[bhikkhus]] and [[bhikkhunis]] of the East Asian [[traditions]] follow the [[Vinaya]] of the [[Dharmaguptaka]] school, while the {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n [[traditions]] follow the [[Mūlasarvāstivāda]]. If we wish to understand the relationship between the existing [[Sanghas]] of the various schools, then we must investigate the relationships between the [[early schools]] of [[Buddhism]] from whom the [[Vinayas]] and [[ordination]] [[lineages]] derive.
+
The [[traditional]] [[Theravādin]] [[view]] would have it that the [[bhikkhunis]] in [[existence]] today are ‘[[Mahāyāna]]’.
 +
 
 +
[[Mahāyāna]] is believed to have descended from the [[Mahāsaṅghika]] school.
 +
 
 +
According to the earliest [[Sri Lankan]] chronicle, the [[Dīpavaṁsa]], the [[Mahāsaṅghikas]] are none other than the ‘[[evil]]’ [[Vajjiputtakas]], who advocated the use of [[money]] by [[monks]], and who were defeated at the [[Second Council]], but who later reformed and made a new {{Wiki|recitation}}.
 +
 
 +
Hence the [[Mahāyāna]] is representative of a [[tradition]] whose fundamental principle was {{Wiki|laxity}} in [[Vinaya]].
 +
 
 +
The [[Dīpavaṁsa]] states that the other 17 schools apart from the [[Theravāda]] are schismatic and ‘thorns’ in the [[sāsana]].
 +
 
 +
It is therefore impossible to accept them as part of the same communion.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
But the [[reality]] is that there has never been a distinctively ‘[[Mahāyāna Vinaya]] or [[ordination lineage]].  
 +
 
 +
Rather, some [[bhikkhus]] and [[bhikkhunis]], having [[ordained]] in one of the [[lineages]] of the [[early schools]], choose to study and [[practice]] certain texts and [[ethical]] ideals known as ‘[[Mahāyāna]]’.  
 +
 
 +
The [[bhikkhus]] and [[bhikkhunis]] of the {{Wiki|East Asian}} [[traditions]] follow the [[Vinaya]] of the [[Dharmaguptaka]] school, while the {{Wiki|Central Asia}}n [[traditions]] follow the [[Mūlasarvāstivāda]].  
 +
 
 +
If we wish to understand the relationship between the [[existing]] [[Sanghas]] of the various schools, then we must investigate the relationships between the [[early schools]] of [[Buddhism]] from whom the [[Vinayas]] and [[ordination lineages]] derive.
 
[[File:Buddha-478.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Buddha-478.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
One way of doing this is to examine the origins of the schools in question. Here we enter into the swirling and uncertain [[world]] of [[mythology]], where interpretation is all, and sectarian bias is not merely expected, but is the driving [[motivation]]. Given the contradictory, incomplete, and doubtful nature of the literary sources it is unclear whether we can expect to find even a glimmer of [[truth]]. But our surest evidence derives from the [[happy]] coincidence of the historical/mythic accounts and archaeological findings, and it is here that we begin our search.
 
One of the fullest accounts of the origination of any school is found in the Sinhalese [[Vinaya]] Commentary, which [[exists]] in a [[Pali]] version the [[Samantapāsādikā]], and an ancient {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation the [[Sudassanavinayavibhāsā]] (善見律毘婆沙[[Shan-Jian-Lu-Pi-Po-Sha]], T 1462). This recounts several decisive events that took place in the time of [[Aśoka]]. There was a conflict in the [[Sangha]] that was resolved by the expulsion of the corrupt [[monks]] by [[Aśoka]] together with the Elder [[Moggaliputtatissa]], following which the ‘[[Third Council]]’ was held to reaffirm communal identity. Subsequently [[Moggaliputtatissa]] organized the sending out of ‘{{Wiki|missionaries}}’ to various parts of [[India]], an event that has often been compared with [[Aśoka]]’s sending out of [[Dhamma]]-ministers. The main purpose of this {{Wiki|narrative}} is to establish the credentials of the Sinhalese school, which we know of as [[Theravāda]], but which I will refer to by the more precise and historically accurate term, the [[Mahāvihāravāsins]]. This was established by [[Aśoka]]’s son [[Mahinda]] and his daughter [[Saṅghamittā]].
 
  
There are two major pieces of inscriptional evidence that derive from the early period of [[Indian]] [[Buddhism]]: the [[Aśokan]] {{Wiki|edicts}} and the reliquaries at [[Vedisa]]. Strikingly, both of these confirm the evidence found in the Sinhalese [[Vinaya]] Commentary. The [[Vedisa]] inscriptions mention the names of several [[monks]] who the Sinhalese [[Vinaya]] Commentary says were sent as [[missionaries]] to the [[Himalaya]] soon after the ‘[[Third Council]]’. And [[Aśoka]]’s so-called ‘schism edicts’ (which actually state that the [[Sangha]] is unified, not schismatic!) mention an expulsion of corrupt [[bhikkhus]], which many [[scholars]] have identified with the events prior to the ‘Third Council’. In addition, the Sinhalese archaeological record, while not as decisive, tends to support the general validity of the missions account. This correspondence between epigraphic and textual evidence encourages us to take the missions account of the Sinhalese [[Vinaya]] Commentary seriously.
 
  
In the current context, it is worth recalling the mission of Soṇa and Uttara to Suvaṇṇabhūmi. This is believed by [[Burmese]] to refer to [[Burma]], and Thais to refer to [[Thailand]], while [[scholarly]] opinion lacks such reassuring certainty. This mission, which to this day forms a crucial {{Wiki|narrative}} of [[self]]-identity for [[Buddhists]] in these regions, was said to result in the ordination of 1500 women. Thus [[bhikkhuni]] ordination is intrinsic to South-east Asian [[Buddhism]] from the beginning.
+
One way of doing this is to examine the origins of the schools in question.
 +
 
 +
Here we enter into the swirling and uncertain [[world]] of [[mythology]], where [[interpretation]] is all, and {{Wiki|sectarian}} bias is not merely expected, but is the driving [[motivation]].
 +
 
 +
Given the [[contradictory]], incomplete, and [[doubtful]] [[nature]] of the {{Wiki|literary}} sources it is unclear whether we can expect to find even a glimmer of [[truth]].
 +
 
 +
But our surest {{Wiki|evidence}} derives from the [[happy]] coincidence of the historical/mythic accounts and {{Wiki|archaeological}} findings, and it is here that we begin our search.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
One of the fullest accounts of the origination of any school is found in the {{Wiki|Sinhalese}} [[Vinaya]] Commentary, which [[exists]] in a [[Pali]] version the [[Samantapāsādikā]], and an {{Wiki|ancient}} {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation the [[Sudassanavinayavibhāsā]] ([[善見律毘婆沙]]  [[Shan-Jian-Lu-Pi-Po-Sha]], T 1462).
 +
 
 +
This recounts several decisive events that took place in the [[time]] of [[Aśoka]].
 +
 
 +
There was a conflict in the [[Sangha]] that was resolved by the expulsion of the corrupt [[monks]] by [[Aśoka]] together with the Elder [[Moggaliputtatissa]], following which the ‘[[Third Council]]’ was held to reaffirm communal [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]].
 +
 
 +
Subsequently [[Moggaliputtatissa]] organized the sending out of ‘{{Wiki|missionaries}}’ to various parts of [[India]], an event that has often been compared with [[Aśoka]]’s sending out of [[Dhamma]]-ministers.
 +
 
 +
The main {{Wiki|purpose}} of this {{Wiki|narrative}} is to establish the credentials of the {{Wiki|Sinhalese}} school, which we know of as [[Theravāda]], but which I will refer to by the more precise and historically accurate term, the [[Mahāvihāravāsins]].
 +
 
 +
This was established by [[Aśoka]]’s son [[Mahinda]] and his daughter [[Saṅghamittā]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
There are two major pieces of inscriptional {{Wiki|evidence}} that derive from the early period of [[Indian]] [[Buddhism]]: the [[Aśokan]] {{Wiki|edicts}} and the reliquaries at [[Vedisa]]. Strikingly, both of these confirm the {{Wiki|evidence}} found in the {{Wiki|Sinhalese}} [[Vinaya]] Commentary.
 +
 
 +
The [[Vedisa]] {{Wiki|inscriptions}} mention the names of several [[monks]] who the {{Wiki|Sinhalese}} [[Vinaya]] Commentary says were sent as [[missionaries]] to the [[Himalaya]] soon after the ‘[[Third Council]]’.
 +
 
 +
And [[Aśoka]]’s so-called ‘[[schism]] {{Wiki|edicts}}’ (which actually [[state]] that the [[Sangha]] is unified, not schismatic!) mention an expulsion of corrupt [[bhikkhus]], which many [[scholars]] have identified with the events prior to the ‘[[Third Council]]’.
 +
 
 +
In addition, the {{Wiki|Sinhalese}} {{Wiki|archaeological}} record, while not as decisive, tends to support the general validity of the missions account.
 +
 
 +
This [[correspondence]] between [[epigraphic]] and textual {{Wiki|evidence}} encourages us to take the missions account of the {{Wiki|Sinhalese}} [[Vinaya]] Commentary seriously.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
In the current context, it is worth recalling the [[mission]] of Soṇa and [[Uttara]] to Suvaṇṇabhūmi.  
 +
 
 +
This is believed by [[Burmese]] to refer to [[Burma]], and Thais to refer to [[Thailand]], while [[scholarly]] opinion lacks such reassuring {{Wiki|certainty}}.  
 +
 
 +
This [[mission]], which to this day [[forms]] a crucial {{Wiki|narrative}} of [[self]]-[[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]] for [[Buddhists]] in these regions, was said to result in the [[ordination]] of 1500 women.  
 +
 
 +
Thus [[bhikkhuni]] [[ordination]] is intrinsic to South-east {{Wiki|Asian}} [[Buddhism]] from the beginning.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
One of the major [[missionaries]] was [[Yonaka Dhammarakkhita]]. He was, as his [[name]] indicates, a {{Wiki|Greek}} [[monk]], native of ‘[[Alasanda]]’ ([[Alexandria]]).
 +
 
 +
He features in the [[Pali]] [[tradition]] as a [[master]] of [[psychic]] [[powers]] as well as an expert on [[Abhidhamma]].
 +
 
 +
He went to the {{Wiki|Greek}}-occupied areas in the [[west]] of [[India]].
 +
 
 +
Long ago Przyluski, followed by {{Wiki|Frauwallner}}, suggested that [[Dhammarakkhita]] be identified with the founder of the [[Dharmaguptaka]] school, since [[dhammarakkhita]] and [[dhammagutta]] have [[identical]] meaning.
 +
 
 +
Since that [[time]] two pieces of {{Wiki|evidence}} have come to [[light]] that make this suggestion highly plausible.
 +
 
 +
One is the positive identification of very early [[manuscripts]] belonging to the [[Dharmaguptakas]] in the [[Gandhāra]] region, exactly where we expect to find [[Yonaka Dhammarakkhita]].
 +
 
 +
The second is that the phonetic rendering of his [[name]] in the [[Sudassanavinayavibhāsā]] evidently renders ‘[[Dharmagutta]]’ rather than ‘[[Dhammarakkhita]]’.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
We also note that several texts say that the [[Dharmaguptaka]] was founded by a certain ‘[[Moggallāna]]’.
 +
 
 +
While this is [[traditionally]] identified with the great [[disciple]] of that [[name]], I think it is more likely a reference to [[Moggaliputtatissa]], the [[patriarch]] of the [[Third Council]], who is also regarded by the [[Mahāvihāravāsins]] as their founder.
 +
 
 +
We are thus perfectly justified as [[seeing]] the [[Mahāvihāravāsins]] and the [[Dharmaguptakas]], not as warring schismatic parties, but as long-lost brothers parted only by the accidents of history and the tyranny of distance
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
With regard to the third of our schools, the [[Mūlasarvāstivādins]], the history is even murkier.
 +
 
 +
my opinion the most {{Wiki|persuasive}} {{Wiki|theory}} for the origin of this school was again provided by {{Wiki|Frauwallner}}, who argued that they were originally based in [[Mathura]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
This would align this school closely with the famous [[arahants]] of [[Mathura]], Śāṇavā[[sin]] and [[Upagupta]].
 +
 
 +
Śāṇavā[[sin]] features in all the schools as a revered Elder and [[Vinaya]] [[master]] in the [[Vinaya]] accounts of the [[Second Council]].
 +
 
 +
He is said to have established a major {{Wiki|forest}} [[monastery]], which is called [[Urumuṇḍa]] in the northern sources and [[Ahogaṅga]] in the [[Pali]].
 +
 
 +
Later on, it was this very [[monastery]] that [[Moggaliputtatissa]] resorted to for [[retreat]].
 +
 
 +
The [[spiritual]] [[power]] [[Moggaliputtatissa]] derived from his [[time]] in Śāṇavāsin’s {{Wiki|forest}} [[monastery]] was decisive in convincing [[Aśoka]] to entrust him with the task of purifying the [[Saṅgha]] and organizing the missions.
 +
 
 +
Thus the establishment of the [[Mahāvihāravāsins]] and [[Dharmaguptakas]] is closely associated with the Śāṇavā[[sin]] [[lineage]].
 +
 
 +
It is even possible that Soṇaka, the [[preceptor]] of [[Moggaliputtatissa’s]] [[preceptor]], is simply a misspelling for [[Śāṇaka]] (-[[vāsin]]), in which case the Mahāvihāravā[[sin]] [[ordination]] [[lineage]] would be directly descended from [[Śāṇavāsin]] and the {{Wiki|forest}} [[tradition]] of [[Mathura]].
 +
 
 +
Finally, it should be remembered that one of the other [[missionaries]] was [[Majjhantika]], [[Mahinda’s]] [[ordination]] [[teacher]], who went to {{Wiki|Kaśmir}} and established the school later known as the [[Sarvāstivāda]].
 +
 
 +
This account agrees with the versions of the northern schools (except they generally place the date earlier).
 +
 
 +
It is a point of contention whether this school has any connection as a [[Vinaya]] [[lineage]] with the [[Mūlsarvāstivāda]], or whether they simply share some similar [[doctrines]].  
  
One of the major [[missionaries]] was Yonaka Dhammarakkhita. He was, as his name indicates, a {{Wiki|Greek}} [[monk]], native of ‘Alasanda’ (Alexandria). He features in the [[Pali]] [[tradition]] as a [[master]] of [[psychic]] [[powers]] as well as an expert on [[Abhidhamma]]. He went to the {{Wiki|Greek}}-occupied areas in the west of [[India]]. Long ago Przyluski, followed by Frauwallner, suggested that Dhammarakkhita be identified with the founder of the [[Dharmaguptaka]] school, since dhammarakkhita and dhammagutta have identical meaning. Since that time two pieces of evidence have come to [[light]] that make this suggestion highly plausible. One is the positive identification of very early manuscripts belonging to the Dharmaguptakas in the Gandhāra region, exactly where we expect to find Yonaka Dhammarakkhita. The second is that the phonetic rendering of his name in the Sudassanavinayavibhāsā evidently renders ‘Dharmagutta’ rather than ‘Dhammarakkhita’. We also note that several texts say that the [[Dharmaguptaka]] was founded by a certain ‘[[Moggallāna]]’. While this is [[traditionally]] identified with the great [[disciple]] of that name, I think it is more likely a reference to Moggaliputtatissa, the [[patriarch]] of the [[Third Council]], who is also regarded by the Mahāvihāravāsins as their founder. We are thus perfectly justified as seeing the [[Mahāvihāravāsins]] and the Dharmaguptakas, not as warring schismatic parties, but as long-lost brothers parted only by the accidents of history and the tyranny of distance.
+
In any case, this school is seen as having emerged from geographical dispersion, rather than [[schism]].  
  
With regard to the third of our schools, the Mūlasarvāstivādins, the history is even murkier. In my opinion the most {{Wiki|persuasive}} theory for the origin of this school was again provided by Frauwallner, who argued that they were originally based in Mathura. This would align this school closely with the famous [[arahants]] of Mathura, Śāṇavā[[sin]] and Upagupta. Śāṇavā[[sin]] features in all the schools as a revered Elder and [[Vinaya]] [[master]] in the [[Vinaya]] accounts of the [[Second Council]]. He is said to have established a major forest [[monastery]], which is called Urumuṇḍa in the northern sources and Ahogaṅga in the [[Pali]]. Later on, it was this very [[monastery]] that Moggaliputtatissa resorted to for [[retreat]]. The [[spiritual]] [[power]] Moggaliputtatissa derived from his time in Śāṇavāsin’s forest [[monastery]] was decisive in convincing Aśoka to entrust him with the task of purifying the Saṅgha and organizing the missions. Thus the establishment of the Mahāvihāravāsins and Dharmaguptakas is closely associated with the Śāṇavā[[sin]] [[lineage]]. It is even possible that Soṇaka, the [[preceptor]] of Moggaliputtatissa’s [[preceptor]], is simply a misspelling for Śāṇaka (-vā[[sin]]), in which case the Mahāvihāravā[[sin]] ordination [[lineage]] would be directly descended from Śāṇavā[[sin]] and the forest [[tradition]] of Mathura.
+
The northern accounts are [[contradictory]] in this [[respect]], and some of them do associate the {{Wiki|Kaśmir}} school with [[schism]];
  
Finally, it should be remembered that one of the other [[missionaries]] was Majjhantika, Mahinda’s ordination [[teacher]], who went to Kaśmir and established the school later known as the Sarvāstivāda. This account agrees with the versions of the northern schools (except they generally place the date earlier). It is a point of contention whether this school has any connection as a [[Vinaya]] [[lineage]] with the Mūlsarvāstivāda, or whether they simply share some similar [[doctrines]]. In any case, this school is seen as having emerged from geographical dispersion, rather than schism. The northern accounts are contradictory in this [[respect]], and some of them do associate the Kaśmir school with schism; but these late and fantastic accounts in any case depict a schism from the Mahāsaṅghika, which would place them on the side of the Mahāvihāra/[[Dharmaguptaka]]
+
but these late and fantastic accounts in any case depict a [[schism]] from the [[Mahāsaṅghika]], which would place them on the side of the [[Mahāvihāra]]/[[Dharmaguptaka]]
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}
 
[http://www.congress-on-buddhist-women.org/62.0.html www.congress-on-buddhist-women.org]
 
[http://www.congress-on-buddhist-women.org/62.0.html www.congress-on-buddhist-women.org]
 
[[Category:Theravada Buddhism]]
 
[[Category:Theravada Buddhism]]
 
[[Category:History of Buddhism]]
 
[[Category:History of Buddhism]]
 +
[[Category:Mulasarvastivada Vinaya]]

Latest revision as of 03:01, 17 March 2016

1730034.jpg

One of the central questions in the revival of the bhikkhuni lineage from the Theravādin perspective is the validity of ordination lineages in other schools.

The traditional Theravādin view would have it that the bhikkhunis in existence today are ‘Mahāyāna’.

Mahāyāna is believed to have descended from the Mahāsaṅghika school.

According to the earliest Sri Lankan chronicle, the Dīpavaṁsa, the Mahāsaṅghikas are none other than the ‘evilVajjiputtakas, who advocated the use of money by monks, and who were defeated at the Second Council, but who later reformed and made a new recitation.

Hence the Mahāyāna is representative of a tradition whose fundamental principle was laxity in Vinaya.

The Dīpavaṁsa states that the other 17 schools apart from the Theravāda are schismatic and ‘thorns’ in the sāsana.

It is therefore impossible to accept them as part of the same communion.


But the reality is that there has never been a distinctively ‘Mahāyāna Vinaya or ordination lineage.

Rather, some bhikkhus and bhikkhunis, having ordained in one of the lineages of the early schools, choose to study and practice certain texts and ethical ideals known as ‘Mahāyāna’.

The bhikkhus and bhikkhunis of the East Asian traditions follow the Vinaya of the Dharmaguptaka school, while the Central Asian traditions follow the Mūlasarvāstivāda.

If we wish to understand the relationship between the existing Sanghas of the various schools, then we must investigate the relationships between the early schools of Buddhism from whom the Vinayas and ordination lineages derive.

Buddha-478.jpg


One way of doing this is to examine the origins of the schools in question.

Here we enter into the swirling and uncertain world of mythology, where interpretation is all, and sectarian bias is not merely expected, but is the driving motivation.

Given the contradictory, incomplete, and doubtful nature of the literary sources it is unclear whether we can expect to find even a glimmer of truth.

But our surest evidence derives from the happy coincidence of the historical/mythic accounts and archaeological findings, and it is here that we begin our search.


One of the fullest accounts of the origination of any school is found in the Sinhalese Vinaya Commentary, which exists in a Pali version the Samantapāsādikā, and an ancient Chinese translation the Sudassanavinayavibhāsā (善見律毘婆沙 Shan-Jian-Lu-Pi-Po-Sha, T 1462).

This recounts several decisive events that took place in the time of Aśoka.

There was a conflict in the Sangha that was resolved by the expulsion of the corrupt monks by Aśoka together with the Elder Moggaliputtatissa, following which the ‘Third Council’ was held to reaffirm communal identity.

Subsequently Moggaliputtatissa organized the sending out of ‘missionaries’ to various parts of India, an event that has often been compared with Aśoka’s sending out of Dhamma-ministers.

The main purpose of this narrative is to establish the credentials of the Sinhalese school, which we know of as Theravāda, but which I will refer to by the more precise and historically accurate term, the Mahāvihāravāsins.

This was established by Aśoka’s son Mahinda and his daughter Saṅghamittā.


There are two major pieces of inscriptional evidence that derive from the early period of Indian Buddhism: the Aśokan edicts and the reliquaries at Vedisa. Strikingly, both of these confirm the evidence found in the Sinhalese Vinaya Commentary.

The Vedisa inscriptions mention the names of several monks who the Sinhalese Vinaya Commentary says were sent as missionaries to the Himalaya soon after the ‘Third Council’.

And Aśoka’s so-called ‘schism edicts’ (which actually state that the Sangha is unified, not schismatic!) mention an expulsion of corrupt bhikkhus, which many scholars have identified with the events prior to the ‘Third Council’.

In addition, the Sinhalese archaeological record, while not as decisive, tends to support the general validity of the missions account.

This correspondence between epigraphic and textual evidence encourages us to take the missions account of the Sinhalese Vinaya Commentary seriously.


In the current context, it is worth recalling the mission of Soṇa and Uttara to Suvaṇṇabhūmi.

This is believed by Burmese to refer to Burma, and Thais to refer to Thailand, while scholarly opinion lacks such reassuring certainty.

This mission, which to this day forms a crucial narrative of self-identity for Buddhists in these regions, was said to result in the ordination of 1500 women.

Thus bhikkhuni ordination is intrinsic to South-east Asian Buddhism from the beginning.


One of the major missionaries was Yonaka Dhammarakkhita. He was, as his name indicates, a Greek monk, native of ‘Alasanda’ (Alexandria).

He features in the Pali tradition as a master of psychic powers as well as an expert on Abhidhamma.

He went to the Greek-occupied areas in the west of India.

Long ago Przyluski, followed by Frauwallner, suggested that Dhammarakkhita be identified with the founder of the Dharmaguptaka school, since dhammarakkhita and dhammagutta have identical meaning.

Since that time two pieces of evidence have come to light that make this suggestion highly plausible.

One is the positive identification of very early manuscripts belonging to the Dharmaguptakas in the Gandhāra region, exactly where we expect to find Yonaka Dhammarakkhita.

The second is that the phonetic rendering of his name in the Sudassanavinayavibhāsā evidently renders ‘Dharmagutta’ rather than ‘Dhammarakkhita’.


We also note that several texts say that the Dharmaguptaka was founded by a certain ‘Moggallāna’.

While this is traditionally identified with the great disciple of that name, I think it is more likely a reference to Moggaliputtatissa, the patriarch of the Third Council, who is also regarded by the Mahāvihāravāsins as their founder.

We are thus perfectly justified as seeing the Mahāvihāravāsins and the Dharmaguptakas, not as warring schismatic parties, but as long-lost brothers parted only by the accidents of history and the tyranny of distance


With regard to the third of our schools, the Mūlasarvāstivādins, the history is even murkier.

my opinion the most persuasive theory for the origin of this school was again provided by Frauwallner, who argued that they were originally based in Mathura.


This would align this school closely with the famous arahants of Mathura, Śāṇavāsin and Upagupta.

Śāṇavāsin features in all the schools as a revered Elder and Vinaya master in the Vinaya accounts of the Second Council.

He is said to have established a major forest monastery, which is called Urumuṇḍa in the northern sources and Ahogaṅga in the Pali.

Later on, it was this very monastery that Moggaliputtatissa resorted to for retreat.

The spiritual power Moggaliputtatissa derived from his time in Śāṇavāsin’s forest monastery was decisive in convincing Aśoka to entrust him with the task of purifying the Saṅgha and organizing the missions.

Thus the establishment of the Mahāvihāravāsins and Dharmaguptakas is closely associated with the Śāṇavāsin lineage.

It is even possible that Soṇaka, the preceptor of Moggaliputtatissa’s preceptor, is simply a misspelling for Śāṇaka (-vāsin), in which case the Mahāvihāravāsin ordination lineage would be directly descended from Śāṇavāsin and the forest tradition of Mathura.

Finally, it should be remembered that one of the other missionaries was Majjhantika, Mahinda’s ordination teacher, who went to Kaśmir and established the school later known as the Sarvāstivāda.

This account agrees with the versions of the northern schools (except they generally place the date earlier).

It is a point of contention whether this school has any connection as a Vinaya lineage with the Mūlsarvāstivāda, or whether they simply share some similar doctrines.

In any case, this school is seen as having emerged from geographical dispersion, rather than schism.

The northern accounts are contradictory in this respect, and some of them do associate the Kaśmir school with schism;

but these late and fantastic accounts in any case depict a schism from the Mahāsaṅghika, which would place them on the side of the Mahāvihāra/Dharmaguptaka

Source

www.congress-on-buddhist-women.org