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Udana - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Udana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pali Canon

    Vinaya Pitaka    
   
                                       
Sutta-
vibhanga
Khandhaka Pari-
vara
               
   
    Sutta Pitaka    
   
                                                      
Digha
Nikaya
Majjhima
Nikaya
Samyutta
Nikaya
                     
   
   
                                                                     
Anguttara
Nikaya
Khuddaka
Nikaya
                           
   
    Abhidhamma Pitaka    
   
                                                           
Dhs. Vbh. Dhk.
Pug.
Kvu. Yamaka Patthana
                       
   
         
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The Udana (udāna) is a Buddhist scripture, part of the Pali Canon of Theravada Buddhism. It is included there in the Sutta Pitaka's Khuddaka Nikaya. The title might be translated "inspired utterances". The book comprises 80 such utterances, most in verse, each preceded by a narrative giving the context in which the Buddha utters it.

The famous story of the blind men and the elephant appears in Udana, under Tittha Sutta (Ud. 6.4).[1]

Contents

[edit] Structure of the Udana

The Udana is composed of eight chapters (vagga) of ten discourses each. The chapter titles are:

  1. Bodhivagga (Awakening chapter)
  2. Mucalindavagga (King Mucalinda chapter)
  3. Nandavagga (Ven. Nanda chapter)
  4. Meghiyavagga (Ven. Meghiya chapter)
  5. Soṇavagga (Lay Follower Sona chapter)
  6. Jaccandhavagga (Blind From Birth chapter)
  7. Cullavagga (Minor chapter)
  8. Pāṭaligāmiyavagga (Pataligamiya chapter)

Each discourse includes a prose portion followed by a verse. At the end of each prose section, as prelude to the verse, the following formulaic text is included:

Then, on realizing the significance of that, the Blessed One on that occasion exclaimed:[2]

Atha kho bhagavā etam-atthaṃ viditvā tāyaṃ velāyaṃ imaṃ udānaṃ udānesi:[3]

It is from such "exclamations" (udāna) that the collection derives its name.

[edit] Dating of text

Some scholars consider this one of the earliest of all Buddhist scriptures,[4] while others consider it somewhat later.[5]

Hinuber identifies this type of discourse (although not necessarily the existing collection itself) as being part of the pre-canonical navaṅga (Pali for "nine-fold") which classified discourses according to their form and style, such as geyya (mixed prose and verse), gāthā (four-lined couplets), udāna (utterances) and jātaka (birth story).[6]

[edit] Relationship to other sacred texts

Within Buddhist literature, about a fourth of the Udana's prose sections correspond to text elsewhere in the Pali Canon, particularly in the Vinaya. In addition, in regards to Tibetan Buddhist literature, Hinuber suggests that the Udana formed the original core of the Sanskrit Udānavarga, to which verses from the Dhammapada were added.[7]

In terms of non-Buddhist texts, some Udana concepts can be found in the Vedantic Upanishads and in Jain texts.[8]

[edit] Translations

  • Tr Major-General D. M. Strong, 1902
  • "Verses of uplift", in Minor Anthologies of the Pali Canon, volume II, tr F. L. Woodward, 1935, Pali Text Society[1], Bristol
  • Tr John D. Ireland, Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy, Sri Lanka, 1990; later reprinted in 1 volume with his translation of the Itivuttaka
  • Tr Peter Masefield, 1994, Pali Text Society, Bristol; the PTS's preferred translation; its declared aim is to translate in accordance with the commentary's interpretation

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ See, for example, Thanissaro (1994).
  2. ^ Thanissaro's translation, e.g., in Thanissaro (1994).
  3. ^ SLTP (n.d.).
  4. ^ Nakamura (1980); and, Hinuber (2000), p. 46 (§91).
  5. ^ L. S. Cousins in Buddhist Studies in Honour of Hammalawa Saddhatissa, ed Dhammapala, Gombrich & Norman, University of Jayawardenepura, 1984, page 56
  6. ^ Hinuber (2000), pp. 7 (§10), 46 (§91); and, Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), p. 348, entry for "Nava" at http://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/philologic/getobject.pl?c.1:1:2826.pali (retrieved 2007-10-12). In particular, Hinuber (2000, p. 46, §91) states: "The Udāna ... belongs to those old texts mentioned already as one of the navaṅga.... [I]t does not seem to be impossible that there once was an Ud having only verses such as those in the Udānavarga...."
  7. ^ Hinuber (2000), pp. 45 (§89), 46 (§91).
  8. ^ Hinuber (2000), p. 46 (§91).

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links

  • Udana at Access to Insight; selections from translations by Ireland and Thanissaro.



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