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Buddha-Dharma-Sangha History

Ambapālī Great Arhat

“Ambapālī. A beautiful and wealthy courtesan of *Vaiśālī who became a follower of the *Buddha. She was named after the mango fruit (Pāli, amba) because she was reputed to have been found at the foot of a mango tree. It is narrated in the *Mahāparinibbāna Sutta that Ambapālī invited the Buddha to dine at her house on his last visit to Vaiśāli before his death. He accepted the invitation, declining a similar one from the local princes. Ambapālī donated to the *Saṃgha a residence constructed in her garden. She had a son who became an elder in the Order (Saṃgha) and she herself eventually renounced the world, gained insight into impermanence (anitya) through contemplating the ageing of her own body, and became an *Arhat.” (PDoB)

See Buddha’s Ten Great Disciples

(EoBDKCMLJ)

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Bibliography Buddha-Dharma-Sangha History

Shramanera Vinaya and Rules of Deportment Buddhist Text (SV)

Shramanera Vinaya and Rules of Deportment Buddhist Text (SV)

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Buddha-Dharma-Sangha Cloud History

Triple Jewel

“I Take Refuge in the Triple Jewel (Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha)”

The Triple Jewel, also called the Triple Gem or the Three Refuges, refers to the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha.

Field of merit from the Longchen Nyingtik Ngöndro

See Shakyamuni Buddha Siddhartha Gautama – “The Buddha

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Buddha-Dharma-Sangha History

Sangha

“I Take Refuge in the Triple Jewel (Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha)”

Buddhist Sangha is made of ordained Monks and Nuns, and Buddhist laymen and laywomen who have Take Refuge in the Triple Jewel (Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha)

The editor is a member of the Four-Fold Buddhist Sangha — formerly as a Buddhist Monk, and now as an Upasaka (Buddhist layman)

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