 Pali Proper Names 
- P -
 Pali Proper Names 
- P -
  - Pecchadāyaka. See Mañcadāyaka.
- Pejalaka. See Sejalaka.
- Pekhuniya. Grandson of 
  Rohana, who is, therefore, called Pekhunniyanattā (A.i.193). The Commentary (AA.i.419) calls Pekhuniya a setthi.
- Pelagāma vihāra. A monastery in Ceylon, built by Kutakaova Tissa. 
  Mhv.xxxiv.32; see also Mhv.Trs.240, n.1.
- Pelahāla. A village in Ceylon, granted by Aggabodhi IV. for the 
  maintenance of the Padhānaghara built by him for Dāthāsiva. Cv.xlvi.13.
- Pelivāpikagāma. A village seven leagues to the north of 
  Anurādhapura. When Dutthagāmanī was looking for material for the building of 
  the Mahā Thūpa, four gems were discovered by a hunter near the tank of this 
  village. Mhv.xxviii.39; Mhv.Trs.190, n.1.
- 
  
  Pema Sutta
- Penambangana. See Setambangana.
- Pennākata. See Bhennākata.
- Peraddonī. A town in Ceylon, the modern Peradeniya. Cv.xci.2.
- Perumpalaya. A village in South India. Cv.lxxvi.287.
- 
  
  Pesakāradhītuvatthu
- Pesalā atimaññanā Sutta. Once when Vangīsa was at Aggālavacetiya 
  with his tutor, Nigrodhakappa, he found himself despising his friendly 
  colleagues, proud of his own skill of improvisation. This discovery made him 
  repent of his conceit and admonish himself. S.i.187f.
- 
  
  Pessa
- Pesuna Sutta. Few are they who abstain from slander. S.v.469.
- 
  
  Peta Vatthu
- Petakālankara. A tīkā by Ñānābhivamsa on the Nettippakarana. 
  Sās.134.
- Petakopadesa
- Pettanngavālika. A monastery built by Saddhā Tissa. Mbv.xxxlii.8.
- Petteyya Sutta. Few are they who show reverence to their fathers. 
  S.v.467.
- 
  
  Phagguna
- Phaggunī. One of the two Aggasāvikā of Nārada Buddha. Bu. x. 24; 
  J.i.37.
- 
  
  Phala Jātaka (No. 54)
- 
  
  Phala Sutta
- 
  
  Phaladāyaka Thera
- 
  
  Phaladāyaka vimāna Vatthu
- Phalaganda. One of the seven human beings born in the Avihā-world, 
  where they will pass completely away. S.i.35, 60, etc.
- Phalagga parivena. A building in Anurādhapura, erected by 
  Devānampiyatissa on the spot where Mahinda sat wrapt in meditation. 
  Mhv.xv.209.
- Phalakadāyaka Thera. An arahant. Ninety one kappas ago he was a 
  waggon builder (yānakāra), and gave a plank of sandal wood to the Buddha 
  Vipassī. Fifty seven kappas ago he was king four times under the name of 
  Bhavanimmita (v.l. Santa) (Ap.i.174). He is probably identical with Tissa 
  Thera (No. 13). ThagA.i.199f.
- Phālakāla. The name of three generals of Rohana who were subdued by 
  the forces of Parakkamabāhu I. Cv.lxxv. 180,183.
- Phalika. One of the peaks of the Himālaya (J.v.415). Phalikaguhā 
  was evidently in this peak. J.ii.6, 7, 8.
- Phalikasandāna. One of the Theras dwelling in the Kukkutārāma in 
  Pātaliputta in the time of the Buddha. Vin.i.300.
- Phaludhiya. A Damila chief, ally of Kulasekhara. Cv.lxxvi.99.
- 
  
  Phandana Jātaka (No. 475)
- Pharusa Sutta. Few are those who abstain from harsh speech. 
  S.v.469.
- Phārusa, Phārusaka. One of the parks of Tāvatimsa. J.vi.278; 
  Vibb.A.439; PSA.259, etc.
- Phārusaka. A garden in Ceylon, laid out by Parakkamabāhu I. 
  Cv.lxxix.10.
- Phārusaphaladāyaka Thera. An arahant. Ninety one kappas ago he saw 
  Vipassī Buddha and offered him a phārusa fruit. Ap.i.296.
- 
  
  Phassa Sutta
- Phassamūlaka Sutta. Three things are rooted in, and conditioned by, 
  contact: feeling pleasant, painful and neutral. S.iv.215.
- Phassāyatanika Sutta. The Buddha explains how necessary is the 
  right understanding of the arising and destruction, the satisfaction and 
  misery, and the escape from the sixfold sphere of contact. S.iv.43f.
- 
  
  Phāsu Sutta
- Phāsuvihāra Vagga. The eleventh section of the Pañcaka Nipāta of 
  the Anguttara Nikāya. A.iii.127 ff.
- Pheggū. A Therī of Jambudīpa who came to Ceylon, where she taught 
  the Vinaya. Dpv.xviii.12.
- Phena Sutta
- Phudhamanakamanta. Mentioned among the dhammika vijjā. VibhA. 410.
- Phulla. Ninety two kappas ago there were seven kings of this name, 
  all previous births of Sangharakkhita (Kadambapupphiya) Thera. v.l. Puppha. 
  ThagA.i.217; Ap.i.217.
- 
  
  Phusatī
- Phusati Sutta. To him who toucheth not comes no touch. A wicked 
  man's actions recoil upon him. S.i.13.
- 
  
  Phussa
- Phussā. One of the two chief women disciples of Tissa Buddha. 
  J.i.40; Bu. xviii. 22.
- 
  
  Phussadeva
- Phussamittā. A denizen of purgatory (vinipātikā) who had the power 
  of travelling through the air. Vsm. 382; PSA. 79.
- Phussamitta. A monk of the Kurundaka vihāra in Ceylon; he was 
  evidently a commentator. AA.i.31.
- Picumālaka.-A locality in Anurādhapura where the rank of 
  Jayamahālekhaka was conferred on Bodhigutta. Mbv.164.
- Pihita Sutta. The world is shut in by death. S.i.40.
- Pilakkhaguhā
- 
  
  Pilakkhaphaladāyaka Thera
- Pīlapitthi. A monastery in Ceylon, built by king Kanitthatissa. 
  Mhv.xxxvi.15.
- Pilavasu. A fortress erected by Parakkamabāhu I. Cv.lxx.93, 97.
- Pilavitthi. A locality in the Dakkhinadesa of Ceylon, where there 
  was a fortress (Cv.lxix.8; lxx.71). It is perhaps identical with Pillavitthi.
- Pilayakūta.-Evidently another name for Sīlakūta. See Mbv. 126, 128, 
  129.
- Pilayamāra. A Damila usurper, the senāpati of Panayamāra, whom he 
  slew. He, in his turn, was slain by his own senapāti Dāthika. Pilayamāra 
  reigned for seven years (between 44-29 B.C.). Mhv.xxxiii.58; Dpv.xix.15; 
  xx.16.
- Pilimvatthu. A village near Badalatthalagāma. Cv.lxv.5.
- 
  
  Pilinda Vaccha, Pilindi Vaccha, Pilindiya Vaccha
- Pilinda, Pilindī. The personal name of PilindaVaccha (above).
- Pilindagāma. Another name for 
  ārāmikagāma.
- Piliya. A setthi of Benares, a previous birth of
  Devadatta. For his story see
  Asampadāna Jātaka. J.i.466 ff.
- Piliyakkha. A king of Benares, a former birth of Ananda. For his 
  story see the Sāma Jātaka. J.vi.71ff.; also Mil. 198; Mtu.ii.212, 216, 226.
- Pillavitthi. A village near the Kālavāpī, mentioned in the account 
  of the campaigns of Parakkamabāhu I. (Cv.lxxii.163, 170). It is very probably 
  identical with Pilavitthi. Cv.Trs.i.335, n. 4.
- Pillicchakoli. A locality in Ceylon. SA.ii.169.
- 
  
  Pilotika
- Pilotikakamma. A chapter in the Apadāna (Ap.i.299 f; repeated in 
  UdA.263f ) which mentions various incidents in the lives of the Bodhisatta, as 
  a result of which the Buddha, in his last life, had to suffer physical 
  ailments and calumny. See Pubbakammapiloti.
- 
  
  Pinda Sutta
- 
  
  Pindapātadāyaka Tissa
- 
  
  Pindapātapārisuddha Sutta
- Pindapātika Thera. An arahant. Ninety two kappas ago he was in the 
  Tusita world in the time of Tissa Buddha and, leaving there, he gave alms to 
  the Buddha. Ap.i.285.
- Pindapātika Tissa. An Elder of the kingdom of Devaputta. He is 
  mentioned in a list of arahants, who, having become arahants by the 
  development of ānāpānasati, could limit the term of their lives. Vsm.292.
- Pindapātika-tissa.-See Saddhātissa (2).
- Pindapātiya Tissa. A monk resident in Ambariya vihāra. For his 
  story see Dārubhandaka Mahātissa. AA.i.276f.
- Pindasakuniya Sutta. The story of a fowler of Rājagaha, born as a 
  peta. S.ii.256.
- Pindika Sutta. The five kinds of persons who eat only out of one 
  bowl. A.iii.220.
- Pindiyālopa Sutta.-A sutta quoted in the Sutta Sangaha (No.79) from 
  the Itivuttaka (p.89) on the heinousness of a dussīla accepting alms from the 
  pious.
- 
  
  Pindola
- 
  
  Pindolya Sutta
- 
  
  Pingala
- 
  
  Pingala Buddharakkhita
- Pingalā. A slave who, having made an assignation with her lover, as 
  soon as her work was finished, waited outside her master's house, expecting 
  his arrival. At the end of the middle watch, she gave up waiting and slept 
  peacefully. This is one of the incidents mentioned in the Sīlavīmamsa Jātaka. 
  J.iii.101.
- 
  
  Pingalakoccha
- 
  
  Pingiya
- 
  
  Pingiyānī
- 
  
  Pinguttara
- Pippali mānava. See Pipphali mānava (below).
- Pipphalī mānava, Pipphalī-kumāra, Pipphalī brāhmana. 
  The name of Mahā Kassapa in a 
  previous birth. The correct form is probably Pippali Mānava.
- 
  
  Pipphaligūhā
- Pipphali-vihāra. A monastery in Sonagiripāda in Ceylon. It was the 
  residence of a monk named Sona (VibhA.439) (q.v.). v.l. Sabbagiri Vihāra. 
  AA.i.225 calls it Pañcala and MA.ii.887 Paceli.
- Pitakattayalakkhana. A treatise ascribed by the Pārupanas to 
  Buddhaghosa. P.L.C.189; Bode, op. cit., 75.
- 
  
  Pītavimānavatthu
- 
  
  Pītha Jātaka (No. 337)
- Pītha Vagga. The first chapter of the
  Vimānavatthu.
- Pīthiya. A Damila usurper who ruled at Anurādhapura for seven 
  months, in the time of Dhātusena. Cv.xxxviii.34.
- Pīti Sutta. Sāriputta tells Ananda how, by the fading away of zest 
  (pīti), he had dwelt in the third jhāna. S.iii.236.
- 
  
  Pītimalla, Pītimallaka, Pītamallaka
- Pitirājā. See Vattagāmanī.
- Pitthigāma. A monastery built in Kārapitthi by Moggallāna Ill. 
  Cv.xliv.50.
- 
  
  Piyā
- 
  
  Piya Sutta
- Piya Vagga. The sixteenth chapter of the
  Dhammapada.
- 
  
  Piyadassī
- Piyajāli. A teacher of the Abhidhamma who handed it down in 
  pupillary succession. DhSA., p.32.
- 
  
  Piyajātika Sutta
- 
  
  Piyaka
- Piyaketa. One of the three palaces of Vidhurapandita. J.vi.289.
- Piyālaphaladāyaka Thera. An arahant. Thirty one kappas ago he was a 
  hunter, and seeing the Buddha Nārada, he offered him a piyālafruit 
  (Ap.i.440f). He is probably identical with Pindola Bhāradvāja (ThagA.i.245). 
  See also Phaladāyaka.
- Piyālapupphiya Thera. An arahant. Ninety one kappas ago he was a 
  hunter who, seeing the Buddha Vipassī, threw a piyāla flower on the path 
  whereon he had trodden. Ap.i.220.
- Piyālī. Fifteen kappas ago there were three 
  kings of this name, previous births of Devasabha Thera. ThagA.i.198; but see 
  Ap.i.170, where they are called Mālabhī.
- Piyanga parivena. A building attached to the Mahāvihāra. v.l. 
  Cingara parivena. VibhA.292.
- Piyangalla. A village of Ceylon, in the Kotthivāta district. The 
  Mahāvamsa relates an incident of a monk of this village who wished to have a 
  share in the building of the Mahā Thūpa, in spite of the orders of 
  Dutthagāmanī. Mhv.xxx.29ff.
- 
  
  Piyangudīpa
- 
  
  Piyañjaha Thera
- 
  
  Piyankara
- Piyankara Sutta. Records the incident, above related, of 
  Piyankara's mother.
- Piyapāla. A teacher of the Abhidhamma. DhSA., p.32.
- Pokkhara. A musical instrument, or, perhaps, a divine musician. 
  VvA.93; see also note on p.372.
- Pokkharakkhī. One of the wives of Candakumāra (the Bodhisatta). 
  J.vi.148.
- Pokkharanī Sutta. The ill which remains to an Ariyan disciple who 
  has won insight compared to the ill which he has destroyed, is as the water 
  taken up by the tip of a blade of grass compared to the water left behind in a 
  tank fifty yojanas in length, breadth and depth. S.ii.134; S.v.460.
- Pokkharaniyā. A vihāra in Sāmagāma where the Buddha is said once to 
  have stayed. A.iii.309; AA.ii.660. The translator (G.S.iii.220) calls it a 
  lotus pond; the Commentary definitely calls it a Vihāra.
- Pokkharapāsaya. A tank in Ceylon, built by Upatissa II. 
  Cv.xxxvii.185.
- 
  
  Pokkharasāti, Pokkharasādi
- Pokkharavatī. A city, the birthplace of Tapussa and Bhalliya. 
  Thag.A.i.48.
- Polajanaka. The younger son of
  Mahājanaka. For his story see the
  Mahājanaka Jātaka. J.vi.30ff.
- Polamittā (v.l. Posamittā). A Yakkhinī, wife of Mahākālasena. She 
  was from Lankapura and her mother was Gondā. MT.
  259 f.
- Polonnarutala. A tank in Ceylon, restored by, Parakkamabāhu I. 
  Cv.lxviii.49.
- Ponamaravatī. A locality in South India, mentioned in the account 
  of the campaigns of Lankāpura. Cv.lxxvii. 20, 22, 92.
- Porānavamsa. A chronicle, probably of Ceylon, mentioned in the 
  Gandhavamsa. (p. 70).
- Porogāhali. A district in the Dakkhinadesa of Ceylon. Cv.lxvi.108.
- Posāla Sutta, or Posālamānava puccha. See
  Posāla.
- Posāla
- 
  
  Posiya Thera
- Pota, Potana, Potala, Potali
- 
  
  Potaliputta
- 
  
  Potaliya
- 
  
  Potaliya Sutta
- 
  
  Pothila, Potthila Thera
- Potiriya. See Selissariya.
- Potthā. Wife of Vasabha's uncle, the senāpati Subha. She saved the 
  life of Vasabha and, later, when he became king, he made her his queen 
  (Mhv.xxxv.70). She built a thūpa and a temple attached to the Catussāla in the 
  Mahāvihāra (Ibid., vs. 90).
- Potthadāyaka Thera. An arahant. Ninety one kappas ago he gave a 
  gift of bark (? pottha) in the name of the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha. 
  Ap.i.237.
- 
  
  Potthaka Sutta
- 
  
  Potthakuttha
- 
  
  Potthapāda
- 
  
  Potthapāda Sutta
- Potthasāta. The senāpati of Aggobodhi IV. He built the Aggabodhi 
  parivena in the Jetavanārāmā at Anurādhapura. Cv.xlvi.22.
- 
  
  Pottika, Pottiya
- 
  
  Pubba (or Hetu) Sutta
- Pubba Kucāyana. See Kaccāyana.
- Pubbadesa. See Pācīnadesa.
- Pubbajira (v.l. Pubbavicira). A village of the Vajjians which was 
  the constant dwelling place of Channa. The people there were blamed for his 
  suicide (M.iii.260). The village seems to have been also called Pubbavijjhana. 
  S.iv.59.
- 
  
  Pubbakammapiloti
- 
  
  Pubbakotthakā
- 
  
  Pubbakotthaka Sutta
- Pubbakotthaka. See below Pubbakotthakā.
- Pubbangama Sutta. Just as the dawn precedes sunrise, so do right 
  views (samāditthi) precede good actions. A.v.236f.
- Pubbangamaniya Thera. An arahant. Ninety four kappas ago he was a 
  leader of eighty four thousand religieux and waited upon holy ones. Ap.i.243.
- Pubbanha Sutta. Those that practise righteousness at morn, at noon, 
  and at eve, are always happy. A.i.294.
- 
  
  Pubbārāma
- 
  
  Pubbaseliyā
- Pubbavicira, Pubbavijjhana. See Pubbajira.
- 
  
  Pubbavideha
- Pubbayogāvacara Sutta. One of the suttas preached to Ananda as 
  introduction to the Khaggavisāna Sutta. It dealt with the five advantages of 
  pubbayogāvacara. SNA.i.47.
- Pucchārāma. A monastery, rebuilt by Udaya I. Cv.xlix.28. It is 
  probably identical with the Pubbārāma; 
  Cv.Trs.i.130 n. 2, and 144, n. 4.
- 
  
  Pucimanda Jātaka (No. 311)
- Pucimanda Vagga. The second section of the Cātukka Nipāta of the 
  Jātakatthakathā.
- Pūgadandakāvāta. A stronghold in Rohana, mentioned in the account 
  of the campaigns of Parakkamabāhu I. Cv.lxxv.86, 95, 143.
- 
  
  Puggala
- 
  
  Puggalapaññatti
- Puggalappasāda Sutta. On the five disadvantages of devotion to a 
  person. A.iii.270.
- Pūjā parivena
- Pukkāma. A city in Burma (Arimaddana). Cv.lxvii.74.
- 
  
  Pukkusa
- 
  
  Pukkusāti
- 
  
  Pulacceri
- Pulahattha. A Damila usurper who reigned for three years at 
  Anurādhapura in the time of Vattagāmanī. He was slain by his general Bāhiya. 
  Mhv.xxxiii.56f.; Dpv.xix.15; xx.15.
- Pulavaka Sutta. The idea of a worm eaten corpse, if cultivated, 
  leads to great profit. S.v.131.
- Pulinacankamiya Thera. An arahant. Thirty one kappas ago he was a 
  hunter who, seeing the covered walk (cankama) of Sikhī Buddha, scattered sand 
  over it (Ap.ii.418). He is probably identical with Nandaka Thera. ThagA.i.299.
- 
  
  Pulinapūjaka Thera
- Pulinapupphīya. A Cakkavatti of ninety one kappas ago, a former 
  birth of Ñānasaññaka (or Piyañjaha) Thera. Ap.i.161f.; ThagA.i.169.
- 
  
  Pulinathūpiya Thera
- Pulindā. The name given to the wild tribes of Ceylon, evidently to 
  be identified with the present Veddas. Their ancestry is traced to Jīvahattha 
  and Dipellā, the son and daughter of Vijaya by Kuvenī. Mhv.vii.58; MT.264, 
  266.
- Pulinuppādaka Thera. An arahant. One hundred thousand kappas ago he 
  was an ascetic named Devala with eighty thousand followers. He erected a thūpa 
  of sand and honoured it in the name of the Buddha (Ap.ii.426 ff). He is 
  probably identical with Sirima Thera. ThagA.i.280f.
- 
  
  Punabbasu
- 
  
  Punabbasukutumbikaputta Tissa Thera
- 
  
  Punabbasumātā
- 
  
  Punabbasumitta
- Pūnagāma. A ford on the Mahāvālukagangā. Cv.lxxii.6.
- 
  
  Pundarīka
- Pundarīkā. A class of nymphs who provided music for Sakka, or, 
  perhaps, the name of some musical instruments. See VvA.93, 96, 211; and 372f.
- 
  
  Punkhagāma
- 
  
  Punkonda
- 
  
  Punnā
- Punna parivena. See Pūjā parivena.
- 
  
  Punna, Punnaka
- 
  
  Punnabhadda
- 
  
  Puññābhisanda Vagga
- Puñña-cetiya. A cetiya attached to the monastery where Ariyavamsa 
  wrote the Manisāramañjūsā. Bode, op. cit., 42.
- Punnāgapupphiya Thera. An arahant. Ninety two kappas ago he was a 
  hunter who, while wandering in the forest, saw a flower, which he offered on a 
  heap of sand in the name of the Buddha Tissa. Ninety one kappas ago he was a 
  king named Tamonuda (Ap.i.180). He is probably identical with Suhemanta Thera. 
  ThagA.i.212.
- 
  
  Punnaji
- 
  
  Punnaka
- 
  
  Punnaka(mānava) pucchā (or  pañha)
- Punnakāla. A Yakkha who, in the time of Kakusandha Buddha, spread 
  in Ceylon a pestilence called Pajjaraka. MT. 349.
- Puññalakkhanā. Wife of Anāthapindika. v.l. Punnalakkhanā. J.ii.410, 
  415; iii.435.
- Punnalakkhanadevī. See Puññalakkhanadevī.
- 
  
  Punnamā Sutta
- 
  
  Punnamāsa Thera
- 
  
  Punnamukha
- 
  
  Punnanadī Jātaka (No. 214)
- 
  
  Punnapāti Jātaka (No. 53)
- Punnasīha. Father of Uttarā 
  Nandamātā (AA.i.240.). See Punna (1).
- 
  
  Punnavaddhana
- Puññavaddhana Sutta.-A name given in the Sutta Sangaha (No. 60) to 
  the Vanaropa Sutta (1).
- Puññavaddhana. Son of Dhammadassī Buddha. Bu.xvi.14. See also
  Punnavaddhana.
- Punnavallika. A locality in Ceylon, the residence of Mahātissa. 
  Vsm.143; DhSA.116.
- Punneli. A village granted by Dāthopatissa II. to the Thūpārāma. 
  Cv.xlv.28.
- Punnikā 1. A slave girl of 
  Pokkharasāti. M.ii.201.
- Punnikā 2. See Punnā (3).
- 
  
  Punniya Sutta
- Punniya. A monk. He if; mentioned as visiting the Buddha and asking 
  him under what conditions a sermon presents itself to the mind of a Tathāgata. 
  A.iv.337f.;v.154f.
- 
  
  Punnovāda Sutta
- Puppha Sutta.-See Vaddha Sutta.
- 
  
  Puppha Thera
- Pupphabhānī Sutta. The three kinds of people in the world: the 
  tricky tongued (gūthabhānī), the fair spoken (pupphabhānī), and the honey 
  tongued (madhubhānī). A.i.127.
- Pupphacangotiya Thera. An arahant. Thirty one kappas ago he took a 
  casket of flowers which he sprinkled over Sikhī Buddha. He was five times 
  king, under the name of Devabhūti. Ap.i.118.
- Pupphachadaniya. In the very distant past there were five kings of 
  this name, all previous births of Maggadattika Thera. Ap.i.189.
- Pupphachattiya Thera. An arahant. Ninety four kappas ago he made a 
  parasol of lotus flowers, which he held over Siddhattha Buddha. Seventy four 
  kappas ago he was king nine times, under the name of Jalasikha. Ap.i.264f.
- Pupphadhāraka. Ninety one kappas ago he was an ascetic wearing bark 
  and antelope skin. Seeing Vipassī Buddha, he held over him a canopy of 
  pāricchattaka flowers. Eighty seven kappas ago he was a king, named 
  Samantadharana. Ap.i.244.
- 
  
  Pupphaka
- Pupphapura. Another name for Pātaliputta (q.v.). E.g., Dpv.xi.28; 
  Mhv.xxix.36.
- Pupphārāma. A central monastic establishment in Sirivaddhanapura 
  (modern Kandy) in Ceylon. It formed the headquarters of the Siamese monks 
  under Upāli, who came to Ceylon at the invitation of the king 
  Kittisirirājasīha. Cv.c.86, 141.
- 
  
  Puppharatta Jātaka (No. 147)
- Pupphāsaniya Thera. An arahant. Ninety four kappas ago he saw 
  Siddhattha Buddha, and, following him to his hermitage, made for him a seat of 
  flowers. Ap.i.254f.
- 
  
  Pupphathūpiya Thera
- Pupphavāsa.-A vihāra in the west of Ceylon. Near it was Devagāma. 
  Ras.ii.13.
- Pupphavatī
- Pupphita. Seventeen kappas ago there were three kings of this name, 
  all previous births of Kutajapupphiya Thera. Ap.i.191.
- 
  
  Purābheda Sutta
- 
  
  Puradeva
- Pūralāsa Sutta. Another name (SNA.ii.400) for 
  Sundarikabhāradvāja 
  Sutta.
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  Purāna
- 
  
  Pūrana Kassapa
- Purānāma. One of the four villages granted by Parakkamabāhu IV. for 
  the maintenance of the special parivena, built for Medhankara. Cv.xc.87.
- Puratthimadesa. See Pācīnadesa.
- Purindada. A name for Sakka, because, as a human being, he bestowed 
  gifts from town to town (pure pure dānam adāsi). S.i.229; DhA.i.264; cp. 
  Sanskrit purandara (destroyer of cities).
- Purisa Sutta. The Buddha, in answer to a question of Pasenadi, 
  tells him that three kinds of inward experience arise in a man for his bane - 
  greed, hate, and dullness. S.i.70.
- Purisagati Sutta. On the seven conditions of a person (purisagatiyo), 
  and an explanation of anūpādā parinibbāna. A.iv.70ff.
- Purisarūpa Sutta. Nothing so enslaves a woman as the form, etc., of 
  a man. A.i.2.
- 
  
  Puta Sutta
- 
  
  Putabhatta Jātaka (No. 223)
- Putabhattasilā, Putabhattasela. A mountain in Ceylon where 
  Parakkamabāhu I. built a monastery for the Araññavāsī fraternity (Cv. 
  lxxxiv.24). This was the residence of several well known scholars, such as 
  Dhammakitti. P.L.C. ex.
- 
  
  Putadūsaka Jātaka (No. 280)
- Puthu Sutta. Following after the good, hearing the Dhamma, 
  systematic attention thereto, and living according to its precepts   
  these four conduce to increase of insight. S.v.412.
- Puthujjana. A king of old, who, though he gave great gifts, could 
  not attain to beyond the realms of sense. J.vi.99.
- Puthuvindhara. King of Benares and son of Kiki. His son was Suyāma. 
  ThagA.i.151.
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  Pūtigatta Tissa
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  Pūtimamsa
- Pūtimukha. A peta who had been a monk in the time of Kassapa Buddha 
  and who had brought a dissension between two holy monks by carrying tales from 
  one to the other. Pv.i.3; PvA.12ff.
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  Putta Sutta
- Puttabhāga vihāra. A vihāra in Ceylon, restored by Vohāmtissa. MhV. 
  xxxvi.36.
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  Puttamamsa Sutta
- Puttatissa. An astrologer (ganaka), one of the four envoys sent by 
  Devānampiyatissa to the court of Asoka. Dpv.xi.29, 31; cp. MT. 302, where he 
  is called Tissa.
- Pūvagallagāma.-A village on the banks of the Mahāvālukanadī. In it 
  was the Pūvagalla Vihāra. Ras.ii.27; v.l. Pūvapabbata.
- Pūvapabbata.-See Pūvagalla.
- Pūvapabbatavāsī Tissa.-A monk of Pūvagalla Vihāra. Because in past 
  birth he had given a meal of peacocks' flesh, he got that flesh wherever he 
  went. For his story see Ras.ii.27f.
  
  
  
 
 
 