Tuesday, 22 January 2013

Abhishek Pushkarni in Vaishali..

Before the advent of Buddhism and Jainism, Vaiśālī was the capital of the vibrantrepublican Licchavi state.[12] [13] In that period, Vaiśālī was an ancient metropolis and thecapital city of the republic of the Vaiśālī state, which covered most of the HimalayanGangetic region of present-day Bihar state, India. However, very little is known about the early history of Vaiśālī.
The Vishnu Purana records 34 kings of Vaiśālī, the first being Nabhaga, who is believed to have abdicated his throneover a matter of human rights and believed to have declared: "I am now a free tiller of the soil, king over my acre." The last among the 34 wasSumati, who is considered a contemporary of Dasaratha, father of the Hindu god, Lord Rama.
In the republic of Vaiśālī, Lord Mahavira was born. Gautama Buddha delivered his last sermon at Vaiśālī and announced his Parinirvanathere. Vaiśālī is also renowned as the land of Ambapali (also spelled as Amrapali), the great Indian courtesan, who appears in manyfolktales, as well as in Buddhist literature. Ambapali became a disciple of Buddha.
A kilometer away is Abhishek Pushkarini, the coronation tank. The sacred waters of the tank anointed the elected representatives of Vaiśālī. Next to it stands the Japanese temple and the Vishwa Shanti Stupa (World Peace Pagoda) built by the Nipponzan Myohoji sect of Japan. A small part of the Buddha's relics found in Vaiśālī have been enshrined in the foundation and in the chhatra of the Stupa.[citation needed]
Near the coronation tank is Stupa 1 or the Relic Stupa. Here the Lichchavis reverentially encased one of the eight portions of the Master's relics, which they received after the Mahaparinirvana. After his last discourse the Awakened One set out for Kushinagar, but the Licchaviskept following him. Buddha gave them his alms bowl but they still refused to return. The Master created an illusion of a river in spate which compelled them to go back. This site can be identified with Deora in modern Kesariya village, where Ashoka later built a stupa. Ānanda, the favourite disciple of the Buddha, attained Nirvana in the midst of the Ganges outside Vaiśālī.

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