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Sikhī Buddha
The twentieth of the twenty-four Buddhas.
- He was born in the Nisabha pleasance in Arunavatī,
- his father being the warrior (khattiya) Aruna (Arunavā) and his mother Pabhāvatī.
- He was so named because his hair (unhīsa = turban) stood up like a peacock’s flame (sikhā).
- For seven thousand years he lived in the household in three palaces — Sucanda, Giri, Vahana (BuA.p.201 calls them Sucanda kasiri, Giriyasa and Nārivasabha) —
- his wife being Sabbakāmā and his son Atula.
- He left home on an elephant,
- practised austerities for eight months,
- was given milk-rice by the daughter of the millionaire Piyadassī of Sudassanannigama,
- and grass for his seat by Anomadassī.
- His Bodhi-tree was a puṇḍarīka.
- His first discourse was taught in the Migācira pleasance near Arunavatī,
- and his Twin Miracle was performed near Suriyavatī under a campaka tree.
- The Bodhisatta was Arindama, king of Paribhutta. Abhibhū and Sambhava were his chief disciples among monks, and Akhilā (Makhilā) and Padumā among nuns.
- His constant attendant was Khemankara.
- Among his patrons were Sirivaḍḍha and Canda (Nanda) among men,
- and Cittā and Suguttā among women.
- His body was sixty cubits high, and he lived to the age of seventy thousand years, dying in Dussārāma (Assārāma) in Sīlavatī.
- Over his relics was erected a thūpa three leagues in height
(Bu.xxi; BuA.201 ff; cf. D.ii.7; iii.195 f; J.i.41, 94; DhA.i.69; S.ii.9; Dvy.333).
Sikhī Buddha held the Pāṭimokkha ceremony only once in six years (DhA.iii.236; cf. Sp.i.191).
For a visit paid by him to the Brahma world see Abhibhū. His name also occurs in the Arunavatī Paritta (q.v.)
Sikhī Sutta.– The process by which Sikhī Buddha, like the other Buddhas, reached Enlightenment. S.iii.9.¹
¹ This is there called the Hāliddikāni Sutta, and was taught by Mahā-Kaccāna to the householder Hāliddikāni at the Kuraraghara precipice (papāta) in Avanti on the topic discussed in the Māgaṇḍiya Sutta. I can see no mention of Sikhī Buddha (ed.)