1. Padumavatí

Mother of five hundred Pacceka Buddhas. She was once a householder's daughter in a village near Benares; one day, while guarding her father's field, she saw a Pacceka Buddha, and gave him a lotus with five hundred grains of fried rice (lájá), making a wish to have five hundred sons. At that moment, five hundred hunters who stood by gave honey and flesh to the Pacceka Buddha and expressed their wish to be her sons. Later, she was born in a lotus pond, within a lotus. An ascetic, seeing her, brought her up. Wherever she went, lotuses sprang up at her every footstep. The King of Benares, hearing of her made her his chief consort. She gave birth to five hundred sons, the eldest being Mahápaduma. All of them became Pacceka Buddhas (MA.ii.889).

The Anguttara Nikáya Commentary mentions that Padumavatí was a previous birth of the Therí Uppalavanná, and gives her story with much greater detail (i.188ff.; see s.v. Uppalavanná, also ThigA.185ff).


2. Padumavatí

A courtesan of Ujjení, who later became the Therí Abhayamátá.


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