Namo Buddha
नमोबुद्ध | |
---|---|
Namo Buddha Municipality | |
Coordinates: 27°34′16″N 85°35′03″E / 27.57111°N 85.58417°E | |
Country | Nepal |
Province | Bagmati Province |
District | Kavrepalanchok District |
Government | |
• Type | Mayor–council government |
• Mayor | Mr. Kunsang Lama |
• Deputy Mayor | Mr. Ratna Bahadur Lama |
Area | |
• Total | 102.00 km2 (39.38 sq mi) |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 26,160.00 |
• Density | 260/km2 (660/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+5:45 (NST) |
Postal code | 45210 |
Area code | 011 |
Website | www.namobuddhamun.gov.np/ |
Namo Buddha (Nepali: नमोबुद्ध, "Namo", Hommage; "Buddha", to the Buddha) or Takmo Lüjin (Tib. སྟག་མོ་ལུས་སྦྱིན་, Wyl. stag mo (tigress) lus sbyin (body giving)) is located in a municipality in Kavrepalanchok District of Bagmati Province of Nepal,[1] 52 km southeast of Kathmandu. Namo Buddha is named after the self-sacrifice by an early incarnation of Shakyamuni Buddha, performed to save the lives of a tigress and her cubs.[2] The Namo Buddha Stupa houses his bone relics and is considered one of the three most important pilgrimage sites and main stupas in the Kathmandu Valley.[3][2]
Connected to the stupa by a stairway rising into the woods is the site where the prince was actually eaten, sanctified adjacent to the grounds of the Karma Kagyu tradition's Namo Buddha Monastery of Thrangu Rinpoche, named Thrangu Tashi Yangtze Choling. This site and the stupa have been revered by Buddhist masters throughout history, while modern spiritual leaders from the Nyingma, Kagyu, Sakya, and Gelug traditions continue to make pilgrimages to Namo Buddha.[2]
The town of Panauti, 8 km downhill from the stupa, was the location of Prince Mahasattva's (Nepali sources), also known as Prince Nyingthob Chenpo (Tibetan sources), familial palace. The annual festival of Namo Buddha Jatra is held there in August.[2]
It was renamed from Dapcha Kashikhanda.[4]