Sthaviravada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Buddhism


History of Buddhism
Dharmic religions
Timeline of Buddhism
Buddhist councils

Foundations
Four Noble Truths
Noble Eightfold Path
The Five Precepts
Nirvāna · Three Jewels

Key Concepts
Three marks of existence
Skandha · Cosmology · Dharma
Samsara · Rebirth · Shunyata
Pratitya-samutpada · Karma

Major Figures
Gautama Buddha
Nagarjuna · Dogen
Buddha's Disciples · Family

Practices and Attainment
Buddhahood · Bodhisattva
Four Stages of Enlightenment
Paramis · Meditation · Laity

Buddhism by Region
Southeast Asia · East Asia
Tibet · India · Western

Schools of Buddhism
Theravāda · Mahāyāna
Vajrayāna · Early schools

Texts
Pali Canon
Pali Suttas · Mahayana Sutras
Vinaya · Abhidhamma

Comparative Studies
Culture · List of Topics
Portal: Buddhism
Image:Dharma_wheel_1.png

This box: view  talk  edit


Sthaviravāda (Sanskrit; Chinese 上座部) literally means "Teaching Of The Elders". It was one of the two main movements in early Buddhism, the other being that of the Mahāsāṅghika. "The Elders" referred to the elder monks, who were naturally the leaders of the community, and whose voice and views carried more weight than more junior monks.

The two groups separated between the second and third Buddhist council, around 350 BCE. The Sthaviravāda were the proponents of an orthodox understanding of the Buddha's teachings. They were criticised by the Mahāsāṅghika school for adding additional rules to the Patimokkha.

The Sthaviravāda doctrine survives today in the Theravāda tradition, but "although they share the same name (Thera and Sthavira being the Pāli and Sanskrit forms of the same word meaning "elder"), there is no historical evidence that the Theravāda school arose until around two centuries after the Great Schism which occurred at the Council of Pāṭaliputra" ("Oxford Dictionary of Buddhism, Damien KEOWN, 2003). The Theravada is often recognized as being a continuation of the Sthaviravada, after the Third Buddhist Council.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

In other languages