1. Bhadda. A lay disciple of Nādikā who, the Buddha declared, had destroyed the five orambhāgiyasamyojanā and had been born in the highest deva worlds, thence to pass away entirely. D.ii.92.


2. Bhadda Thera. He was born in the family of a setthi of Sāvatthi. His parents had gone to the Buddha before his conception, and had told him that if they had a child they would give him to the Buddha as his servant. When he was seven years old, they took him, arrayed in his best, to the Buddha, in fulfilment of their promise. The Buddha asked Ananda to ordain him. This he did and instructed him, and the same night Bhadda became an arahant. The Buddha called to him saying, "Come, Bhadda," and that was his upasampadā.

In the time of Padumuttara Buddha he had offered hundreds of thousands of robes, etc., to the Buddha and his monks. Thag.vss.473-9; ThagA.i.474f.


3. Bhadda Thera. Perhaps to be identified with Bhadda (2). He is mentioned as staying at the Kukkutārāma in Pātaliputta in the company of Ananda, with whom he discussed the righteous and the unrighteous life (S.v.15f) and the cultivation of the satipatthānas. S.v.171f.


4. Bhadda. One of the two chief disciples of Kondañña Buddha. J.i.30; Bu.iii.304.


5. Bhadda. Commander in chief of Sena I. He built the Bhaddasenāpatiparivenia and endowed it with servants and revenues. Cv.l.82.


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