Pūrṇa

  • Tib.: gang po
  • Pali: Puṇṇa

First published 2020. Last updated 9th Oct 2023.

Disciples named Pūrṇa

A common name in the canonical literature, and a word with a range of literal meanings: full, fulfilled, complete, whole, abundant, accomplished, rich, contented, etc.

At least five of the Buddha Śākyamuni’s disciples with this name are mentioned in the Kangyur:

Pūrṇa Maitrāyaṇīputra, a brahmin from Kapilavastu; his mother, Maitrāyanī, was the sister of Kauṇḍinya, and Pūrṇa was ordained by his uncle when the latter (by then known as Ājñātakauṇḍinya) returned to Kapilavastu soon after the Buddha’s first teaching; Pūrṇa attained the state of arhat in Kapilavastu and only met the Buddha himself later, in Śrāvastī. This is the Pūrṇa who was “foremost in teaching” among the ten principal disciples, and is mentioned in many sūtras including The Questions of Pūrṇa (Toh 61), The Teaching of Vimalakīrti (Toh 176), and The Ratnaketu Dhāraṇī (Toh 138).

The Pūrṇa who was one of the second group of five monks ordained by the Buddha, the “five friends” (nye lnga sde), all Vārāṇasī merchants’ sons (headed by Yaśas and, following his lead, Pūrṇa, Vimala, Gavāṃpati, and Subāhu). First, the Buddha’s former companions in asceticism (pañcaka, lnga sde), followed by these five, together constituted the first ten bhikṣus to receive ordination. This Pūrṇa is the one mentioned in The Chapter on Going Forth, and in many of the lists of śrāvaka disciples that figure in the scene-setting introductions (nidāna, gleng gzhi) of sūtras.

The Pūrṇa of The Deeds of Pūrṇa (Pūrṇāvadāna)1, is the son of a wealthy merchant and his slave girl in the Aparāntaka (Western India) seaport of Sūrpāraka. He was a successful maritime expedition leader and heard of the Buddha from some merchants from Śrāvasti whom he accompanied on a sea voyage. He then went to meet the Buddha, went forth as a monk, and later returned to the south-west, building a sandalwood temple near Sūrpāraka to which he invited the Buddha; the Buddha and his monks arrive flying through the sky. This Pūrṇa is almost certainly also the protagonist in The Precious Discourse on the Blessed One’s Extensive Wisdom That Leads to Infinite Certainty (Toh 99); he is known as Puṇṇa Suppāraka in the Pali texts.

An older Pūrṇa, the “Elder Pūrṇa from Kuṇḍopadāna,” who is also mentioned in The Deeds of Pūrṇa (Pūrṇāvadāna) as one of the monks in the Buddha’s airborne entourage coming to visit the Pūrṇa above (3).

A very rich and generous brahmin called Pūrṇa from the Mountains of the South who invites the Buddha and receives a prediction of enlightenment, but is not ordained; he is the subject of the first story in The Hundred Accounts of Noble Deeds, Beginning with That of Pūrṇa (Pūrṇapramukhāvadānaśataka, Toh 343), and also of “The Story of Pūrṇa,” a section in Part Eight of The Hundred Deeds (Karmaśataka, Toh 340). This Pūrṇa will become a buddha also named Pūrṇa, according to the prediction.

Another disciple is sometimes called Pūrṇa but this should probably more correctly be Pūraṇa, since the Tibetan of his name is rdzogs byed and not gang po, He is the sickly and short-lived Pūraṇa of Śrāvasti, attendant of Aniruddha, who became an arhat just before he died and is the subject of “The Story of Pūraṇa” in Part One of The Hundred Deeds (Karmaśataka, Toh 340).

There are other individuals named Pūrṇa in the Kangyur, including both a māra and a future tathāgata in the Karuṇāpuṇḍarīka (Toh 112).

Bibliography

Main Section

Rotman, Andy (tr.). “The Story of Pūrṇa,” in Divine Stories: Divyāvadāna Part I. Somerville: Wisdom Publications (2008), pp. 71–118.

Notes

The Pūrṇāvadāna is one of the stories included in Sanskrit Divyāvadāna, thought to date to the seventeenth century as a compendium but containing works that are much earlier (see bibliography). For English translation see Rotman (2008).