- Language, Deva
means god and Daha
means a pond
hence the
literal meaning of
Devadaha is "pond of the gods". It is
believed that the gods and
goddesses and saints...
- The
Buddha sta**** in Lumbinívana
during his
visit to
Devadaha and
there preached the
Devadaha Sutta. In 1896,
former Commander-In-Chief of the Nepalese...
- Commentaries, Maya was on a
traditional journey to her
familial home in
Devadaha where she
would give birth, but her
labor started as they were in Lumbini...
- practices. The Buddha, in
multiple Buddhist texts, such as
Majjhima Nikaya and
Devadaha Sutta,
attributes the
ascetic self-mortification
style Tapas practices...
- from the
Koliya dynasty, who
ruled a city
called Koli. He was born in
Devadaha as a
Koliya Prince, as one of the sons of Añjana and Yasodharā. He was...
- King
Jayasena and
brother of
Princess Yasodhara. He
married Kaccanā of
Devadaha,
daughter of Devadahasakka. Kaccanā and
Sihahanu had
these children: King...
-
according to
Buddhist scriptures.[citation needed] He was the son of the king
Devadaha. Añjana had two sons
Suppabuddha and Dandapāni, and two
daughters Māyā...
-
Buddhist pilgrimage sites in Haryana).
Madhya Pradesh:
Sanchi Uttar Pradesh:
Devadaha, Kosambi, Mathura, Pāvā (Fazilnagar,
Varanasi In the
order of
places traveled...
- the
mother of the
Buddha and was from the
Koliyan clan. Maya was born in
Devadaha. She was
married to her
cousin King Suddhodana, who
ruled in the kingdom...
- Abhiniṣkramaṇa Sūtra (佛本行集經),
Suprabuddha was a
wealthy Shākyan who
lived in
Devadaha. He had
eight daughters, the
eldest of whom was Māyā and the youngest,...