 Pali Proper Names
 Pali Proper Names
  - Sanankumāra
- Sānavāsī 2. See Sānuvāsi.
- Sānavāsī, Sānavāsika 1. An epithet of
  Sambhūta Thera.
- Sañcetanika Vagga. The eighteenth chapter of the Catukka Nipāta of 
  the Anguttara Nikāya. A.ii.157 70.
- Sandaka Sutta
- Sandaka. A Paribbājaka. See the Sandaka Sutta.
- Sandeha, Sandeva. An Elder in direct pupillary succession in 
  Jambudīpa, of teachers of the Abhidhamma. DhSA., p. 32.
- Sandha
- Sandhāna
- Sandhibheda Jātaka (No. 
  349)
- Sandhita Thera
- Sandimā. A king of long ago; a previous birth of Ramanīyakutika 
  Thera. ThagA.i.133.
- Sanditthika Sutta
- Sangagāma. A village in Ceylon, near the Kālavāpi. Cv.xlviii.91.
- Sangaha Sutta. The four basis of sympathy (sangahavatthu) are 
  charity, kind speech, kind action, and like treatment of all men. A.ii.31 = 
  ibid., 248.
- Sangāma. A king of Magadha. Buddhaghosa’s father, Kesī was his 
  purohita. Gv.66.
- Sangāmaji Thera
- Sangāmāvacara Jātaka 
  (No. 182)
- Sangārava
- Sangārava Sutta
- Sangayha Sutta
- Sangha
- Sanghā 
- Sanghabedaka Jātaka. ( J.iii.211) Probably another name for the 
  Sandhibheda Jātaka. Cf. Kosambī Jātaka.
- Sanghabhaddā. A queen of Aggabodhi II. Cv.xlii.42.
- Sanghabheda Sutta. The results of bringing about dissension in the 
  Order. A.v.74.
- Sanghabhedaka Khandhaka. The seventh chapter of the Culla Vagga of 
  the Vinaya Pitaka. Vin.ii.180 206.
- Sanghabhedakagāma. A village in Rohana, mentioned in the account of 
  the campaigns of Parakkamabāhu I. Cv.lxxv. 125, 127.
- Sanghabhedaparisakkana Vatthu. The story of how Devadatta informed 
  Ananda of his intention to bring about schism in the Order. DhA.iii.154f.
- Sanghabodhi
- Sanghadāsī
- Sanghadatta Thera.-He lived in Mahālena Vihāra and for twelve 
  years, during the Brahmanatiya famine, a deity looked after him. In the past 
  he had given a meal to a hungry dog. Ras.ii.181f.
- Sanghadattā.-Wife of the minister 
  Sangha, who married her because she walked instead of running in a shower of 
  rain. She gave a robe to Culanaga Thera of Pidhanagalla, and Sakka provided 
  her with divine robes, which she offered at Dakkhinacetiya and 
  Ratanamalicetiya. Ras.ii.177f.
- Sanghadāyikā. See Sanghadāsī (1).
- Sanghādisesa. The second division of the 
  Pārājikā of the Vinaya Pitaka. It 
  comprises thirteen rules, violation of which involves temporary separation 
  from the Order.
- Sanghakapittha. See Kapittha.
- Sanghamāna. A Malaya king. Cv.xlvii.3.
- Sanghamitta
- Sanghamittā Therī
- Sanghamitta vihāra. A monastery in Ceylon, restored by Aggabodhi V. 
  Cv.xlviii.6.
- Sanghanandi. A monk to whom is attributed the Vutti of Kaccāyana’s 
  grammar. P.L.C.180.
- Sanghapāla 1. A parivena, residence of Gothābhaya Thera 
  (xxxvi.114). The Mahāvamsa Commentary (MT. 673) calls it Sanghapālangana.
- Sanghapāla 2. A monk of the Mahāvihāra, teacher of Buddhaghosa. 
  (Cv.xxxvii.232). The Visuddhi Magga was composed according to the wishes of 
  Sanghapāla. Vsm., p.711.
- Sangharakkhita
- Sanghasema. A building in the Mahā-Vihāra, erected by Sena I. and 
  his queen, Sanghā. Cv.l.70.
- Sanghasenapabbata. A building in the Abhayagiri vihāra, erected by 
  Sanghā, wife of Sena II. Cv.li.86.
- Sanghasivā. Wife of Mahātissa. She was the daughter of the ruler of 
  Rohana and had three sons: Aggabodhi, Dappula and Maniakkhika. Cv.xlv.39.
- Sanghāta. A Niraya. It is so called because massive rocks of heated 
  iron meet and crush the victims. J.v.256, 270.
- Sanghātagāma. A village given by Vijayabāhu I. to the Lābhavāsins. 
  Cv.lx.68.
- Sanghatissa
- Sanghupatthāka Thera. An arahant. He was a servant in the monastery 
  of Vessabhū Buddha and waited on the Sangha with great devotion. Seven kappas 
  ago he was king seven times, under the name of Samotthata. Ap.i.191.
- Sanghupatthāyikā.-Another name for Kiñcisanghā (q.v.).
- Sangillagāma. A village in Ceylon, the residence of Bhayasīva. 
  Cv.xli.69.
- Sangīti Sutta
- Sanhā. An eminent Therī of Ceylon. Dpv.xviii.38.
- Sanidāna Sutta. Sense desires, ill will, renunciation, etc., all 
  arise with, casual basis. S.ii.151f.
- Sanimandapa. A building in the Dīpuyyāna. It was decorated with 
  ivory. Cv.lxxiii.118.
- Sañjaya
- Sañjikāputta
- Sañjiva
- Sañjīva Jātaka (No. 150)
- Sankamanattā Therī. An arahant. Seeing Kondañña Buddha walking 
  along the road, she came out of her house and prostrated herself. The Buddha 
  touched her head with his foot. Ap.ii.514.
- Sankantikā. A heretical sect, a division 
  of the Kassapiyā. Mhv.v.9; Dpv.v.48.
- Sankappa Jātaka (No. 251)
- Sankappa Vagga. The first chapter of the Tika Nipāta of the 
  Jātakatthakathā. J.ii.271 321.
- Sankāsanā Sutta. The Buddha says that in the Four Ariyan Truths, as 
  taught by him, there are numberless shades and variations of meaning. S.v.430.
- Sankassa
- Sanketahāla. A place in Ceylon where the Damilas captured 
  Brāhmanatissa. v.l. Guttahāla, Gottahāla. MT. 613.
- Sankha
- Sankhabrāhmana Jātaka. See the Sankha Jātaka (1).
- Sankhadhamana Jātaka. 
  (No. 60)
- Sankhadhātu. One of the Dandanāyaka bhātaro (q.v.). Cv.lxxii.162.
- Sankhāna Sutta. Four powers that are in the world: of computation, 
  cultivation, innocence and collectedness. A.ii.142.
- Sankhapāla
- Sankhapāla Jātaka (No. 
  521)
- Sankhāra Sutta. Some people accumulate acts of body, speech and 
  mind that are discordant; others those that are harmonious; yet others those 
  that are both discordant and harmonious. A.i.122.
- Sankhāruppatti Sutta
- Sankhasetthi. See Sankha (1).
- Sankhata Sutta. There are three condition marks in that which is 
  “conditioned” (Sahkhata). Its genesis is apparent, likewise its passing away 
  and its changeability while it persists. A.i.152.
- Sankhatthalī, Sankhanāyakatthalī, Sankhanāthatthalī. An important 
  place in the Dakkhinadesa of Ceylon, where Kittisirimegha had his capital. It 
  was near Badalatthalī, and is mentioned several times in the account of the 
  campaigns of Parakkamabāhu I. Cv.lxiii.43; lxiv.22; lxvi.9; lxvii.78, 82; also 
  Cv.Trs.i.241, n.2.
- Sankhavaddhamāna. A river in Ceylon, which unites with the 
  Kumbhīlavāna. At the spot where they unite, the Sūkaranijjhara was 
  constructed. Cv.lxviii.32; see Cv.Trs.i.279, n.4.
- Sankhepatthakathā. A compilation quoted by Buddhaghosa as opposed 
  to the Mahāatthakathā. E.g., at Sp.ii.494.
- Sankhepavannanā. A navatīkā by Saddhammajotipāla on the 
  Abhidhammattha sangaha. Gv.40.
- Sankheyya parivena. A monastery in Sāgala where Ayupāla and, later, 
  Nāgasena, lived. Milinda visited this monastery to discuss with these monks. 
  Mil. 19, 22, etc.
- Sankhitta Samyutta. Mentioned by Buddhaghosa (SA.ii.168) as an 
  example of a collection of discourses connected with Suññatā. The reference is 
  probably to the Satthipeyyāla. At Samyutta iv.148ff.
- Sankhyāpakāsaka. A grammatical work by Ñānavilāsa of Laos. 
  Sirimangala wrote a tīkā on it. Bode, op. cit., 47.
- Sankicca
- Sankilesiya Sutta. See Kilesiya Sutta.
- Sankilitthābhā. A class of devas. Beings are born in their world 
  when they have absorbed the idea of tarnished brilliance. M.iii.147.
- Sankita Sutta. A monk who haunts the house of a widow, an unmarried 
  woman (thullakumārī), a eunuch, or the premises of a nun, is suspect. 
  A.iii.128.
- Saññā Sutta
- Saññā Vagga. The seventh chapter of the Pañcaka Nipāta of the 
  Anguttara Nikāya. A.iii.79f.
- Saññaka Thera. An arahant. Ninety two kappas ago he saw the rag 
  robe of Tissa Buddha hanging on a tree and worshipped it. Four kappas ago he 
  was a king named Dumasāra. Ap.i.120.
- Sannaka. One of the chief lay supporters of Piyadassī Buddha. 
  Bu.xiv.22.
- Saññāmanasikāra Sutta
- Saññasāmika Thera
- Saññī Sutta. Sāriputta explains to Amanda how he dwelt in the 
  sphere of “neither perception nor non perception.” S.iii.238.
- Sannibbapaka. A king of one hundred and seven kappas ago, a 
  previous birth of āsanūpatthāyaka Thera. Ap.i.144.
- Sannidhāpaka Thera. An arahant. He had been a householder, and 
  later an ascetic in the time of Padumuttara Buddha. He gave the Buddha a gourd 
  (āmanda) and water to drink. Forty one kappas ago he was a king named Arindama. 
  Ap.i.97.
- Sannīrasela. A village in Ceylon given by Parakkamabāhu IV. for the 
  maintenance of the parivena which he built for Medhankara Thera. Cv.xc.87.
- Sannīratittha. A vihāra in Pulatthipura, established by Mahinda II. 
  Cv.xlviii.134.
- Saññojana Sutta. The seven fetters   of complying, 
  resisting, of view, uncertainty, conceit, worldly lusts, and ignorance. 
  A.iv.7.
- Santa
- Santacitta. A Pacceka. Buddha. M.iii.70.
- Santaka Sutta. The Buddha explains to Ananda how feelings arise and 
  cease to be, what is their “satisfaction” and their "misery." S.iv.219.
- Santakāya Thera
- Santāna Thera. An Elder who came to Ceylon from Rakkhanga, at the 
  head of thirty three monks, at the invitation of Vimaladhammasuriya II. 
  Cv.xcvii.10.
- Sāntanerī. A fortress in South India, mentioned in the account of 
  the campaigns of Lankāpura. Cv.lxxvii.44.
- Santati
- Santhāra Vagga. The fourteenth chapter of the Duka Nipāta of the 
  Anguttara Nikāya. A.i.93f.
- Santhava Jātaka (No. 162)
- Santhava Vagga. The second chapter of the Duka Nipāta of the 
  Jātakatthakathā. J.ii.41 63.
- Santhita Thera. An arahant. Thirty one kappas ago he saw the 
  asattha bodhi of a Buddha and thought of the Buddha's virtues. Thirteen kappas 
  ago he was a king named Dhanittha. Ap.i.210.
- Santhita Thera. An arahant. Thirty one kappas ago he saw the 
  assattha bodhi of a Buddha and fixed his mind on him. Thirteen kappas ago he 
  was a king, named Dhanittha. Ap.i.210f.
- Santi Sutta. On four kinds of person: he bent on his own profit, on 
  another's, on that of both, on that of neither. A.ii.96f.
- Santike Nidāna
- Santusita
- Santuttha
- Santutthi Sutta. Four things are easily available: rag robes, 
  scraps of food, the root of a tree, and ammonia (pūtimutta) from urine. A monk 
  should learn to be content with these. A.ii.26.
- Sānu Sutta
- Sānu Thera
- Sānumātā. The name given to the Yakkhinī who had been the mother of 
  Sānu (q.v.) in a previous birth. When the Yakkhas assembled to hear Sānu 
  preach the Law, they paid her great respect, owing to her kinship with him. 
  SA.i.236; DhA.iv.19.
- Sānupabbata. A mountain in the region of Himavā. J.v.415.
- Sānuvāsīipabbata. A hill near the village of Kundi, where lived 
  Potthapāda (or Kundinagariya) Thera. Pv.iii.2; PvA.179.
- Sapara. A province in Ceylon (Cv.lxviii.8), 
  also called Saparagamu (Cv.xciv.12). It is said to have derived its name from 
  the inhabitants, the Saparā or Sabarā (Savarā), probably another name for the 
  Veddas.
- Saparivāra. A king of twenty seven kappas ago, a previous birth of 
  Paccuggamaniya Thera. Ap.i.240.
- Saparivāracchattadāyaka Thera. An arahant. He heard Padumuttara 
  Buddha preach, and, opening a parasol, threw it up into the air. It stood 
  above the Buddha. The Elder joined the Order at the age of seven, and on the 
  day of his ordination, Sunanda, a brahmin, held a parasol over him. Sāriputta 
  saw this and expressed his joy. Ap.i.265f.
- Saparivārāsana Thera. An arahant. He prepared a seat decked with 
  Jasmine for Padumuttara Buddha, and, when the Buddha was seated, gave him a 
  meal. Ap.i.107f.
- Saparivāriya Thera
- Sāpatagāma. A village in Rohana; Mañju, general of Parakkamabāhu 
  I., fought a battle there against Sūkarabhātu. Cv.lxxiv.131.
- Sapatta.-An eminent nun, expert in the Vinaya in Ceylon. 
  Dpv.xviii.29.
- Sapattangārakokirī Sutta. The story of a petī seen by Moggallāna. 
  She went through the air dried up, sooty, uttering cries of distress. She had 
  been the chief queen of a Kālinga king. Mad with jealousy, she had scattered a 
  brazier of coals over one of the king's women. S.ii.260.
- Sappa Sutta
- Sappadāsa Thera
- Sappagahana. See Sabbagahana.
- Sappaka. See Sabbaka.
- Sappānaka Vagga. The seventh chapter of the Pācittiya.
- Sappanārukokillagāma. A village in Ceylon in which the Buddha's 
  Alms Bowl and Tooth Relic were once deposited. Cv.lxxiv.142.
- Sappañña Vagga. The sixth chapter of the Sotāpatti Samyutta. 
  S.v.404 14.
- Sappasondika pabbhāra
- Sappidāyaka Thera
- Sappinī, Sappinīkā
- Sappurisa Sutta
- Sappurisa Vagga. The twenty first chapter of the Catukka Nipāta of 
  the Anguttara. A.ii.217 25.
- Sappurisānisamsa Sutta. Because of a good man, one grows in virtue, 
  concentration, wisdom and emancipation, qualities which are dear to the 
  Ariyans. A.ii.239.
- Sāpūga. A village of the Koliyans, where Ananda once stayed, and 
  where he preached to the inhabitants. They were called Sāpūgiyā. A.ii.194.
- Sāpūgiya Sutta. The inhabitants of Sāpūga visit Ananda, who is 
  living there. He tells them of the four factors of exertion (padhāniyangāni): 
  for the utter purification of morals, thought, view, and for the utter purity 
  of release. A.ii.194f.
- Sāpūgiyā. The people of Sāpūga (q.v.).
  
  
  
 
 
 