Mahasamghaka

Missing image
Dharma_wheel_1.png
Dharma wheel


Buddhism
Culture
History
List of topics
People
By region and country
Schools and sects
Temples
Terms and concepts
Texts
Timeline

The Mahāsaṃghaka (Majority) sect of Buddhism was formed in the first Buddhist schism around 320 BCE. It split from the Sthaviravāda (Elders) school. The Mahāsaṃghikas were primarily situated in Northwestern India but also with an important presence in southeast India around Amaravati and Nagarjunakonda (the Sthaviravādins were in the Northeast).

The Mahāsaṃghikas differed from the elders in including lay practitioners and non-enlightened monks at the communal meetings which constituted the governmental body for each saṅgha, allowing monks to use gold and silver and eat twice a day, and also asserted that the historical Buddha was a manifestation of a transhistorical Buddha, and phenomena are illusory and empty.

The Mahasamghaka are often regarded as one of the sources of Mahāyāna doctrines.

See also

See also: Mahasamghaka, Buddha, Buddhism, Buddhism by country, Buddhism by region, Buddhist terms and concepts, Buddhist texts, Cultural elements of Buddhism