When was the first buddhist council held




















It was presided by Mahakasyapa, a monk. The council was held in the Sattapani cave at Rajgriha. During this council, the teachings of Buddha were divided into three Pitakas. The significance of the First Council is that senior monks adopted the Vinaya-pitaka and Sutta-pitaka as the accurate teaching of the Buddha, to be remembered and kept by generations of nuns and monks to come.

The Second Buddhist Council was held at Vaisali or Vaishali , an ancient city in what is now the state of Bihar in northern India, bordering Nepal under the patronage of King Kalasoka while it was presided by Sabakami. This Council probably was held about a century after the first one, or about BCE.

It was called to discuss monastic practices, in particular whether monks could be allowed to handle money. It was presided by Moggliputta Tissa. The third part of the Tripitaka was coded in the Pali language. This Council appears to have met to compose commentaries on the Tipitika. It was presided by Vasumitra, while Asvaghosa was his deputy. Buddhism was divided into two sects namely Mahayan and Hinayan. Fifth Buddhist council was held in Mandalay, Burma in the year under the patronage of King Mindon.

It was presided by Jagarabhivamsa, Narindhabhidhaja and Sumangalasami. During this council, stone slabs were engraved with Buddhist teachings. The council commemorated years of Buddhism. He spent much of the night in the Contemplation of the Body, one of the meditation exercises taught by the Buddha for the purification of mind.

When it was almost dawn, he thought, " I shall lie down," but he kept mindful of the body. Before his head touched the pillow and after he raised his feet off the ground, all the remaining defilements disappeared from his mind. He had attained arahantship. And so he went to the council meeting as an arahant. The meeting started three months after the passing away of the Buddha. That meeting is now referred to as the First Buddhist Council.

Venerable Upali was chosen to answer questions about the Vinaya, the monks' and nuns' disciplinary rules. Venerable Ananda, who had the honour of hearing all the discourses of the Buddha and who had an unusually good memory, was chosen to recite all the discourses and answer questions about the teachings.

The First Buddhist Council collected together and arranged the Buddhist Scriptures known as the Pali Tipitaka, which have since been handed down from one generation of monks to another. In the early days of Buddhism, there was no written record of the teachings.

The monks had to memorise the scriptures and then teach the next generation of monks in the same way, it being an oral tradition. About 83 B. The First Buddhist Council After the Buddha passed away a meeting was held to preserve his teachings.

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