Mah
bodhi-va
sa
(‘the great bodhi-tree chronicle’)
.
Buddhist work which relates the story of the
bo(dhi)
tree under which the
Buddha
attained enlightenment. It is attributed to Upatissa, in
c.
11th cent. CE.
Buddhist name for the creator deity of the Hindu religion, as known to the Buddhists of the 6th cent. BCE. According to the
brahmans
, the world was created by the Great Brahm
, and he was conceived of as a personal, masculine deity: the ‘Great Brahm
’ (
Mah
brahm
), the ‘Supreme One’ (
Abhibh
), the ‘Unconquered’ (
Anabhibh
to
), the ‘Ruler’ (
Vasavatti
), the ‘Overlord’ (
Issaro
), the ‘Maker’ (
Katt
), the ‘Creator’ (
Nimm
t
), the ‘Greatest’ (
Se
ho
), the ‘Assigner’ (
Sañjit
), the ‘most Ancient’ (
Vas
), the ‘Father of all that are born and are to be born’ (
Pit
-bh
tabhavy
na