when/why did renaming people start?

Exploring Theravāda's connections to other paths - what can we learn from other traditions, religions and philosophies?
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alan...
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when/why did renaming people start?

Post by alan... »

where someone ordains and they give them a new name. did this start in the time of the buddha? as far as i can tell ananda was still ananda after ordination and many others retained their names.

when and why did they start giving everyone new names?
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DNS
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Re: when/why did renaming people start?

Post by DNS »

It started pretty much from the beginning. Gotama became 'Buddha' (awakened one). Upatissa and Kolita became Sariputta and Moggallana. And there are numerous others mentioned in the Pali Canon that had name changes with the ordination (although apparently not all).

I imagine it has to do with the new role, the new identity in changing from a lay man to the life of a monk. And then the preceptor picking a name that might be appropriate to your temperament, personality, etc.
alan...
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Re: when/why did renaming people start?

Post by alan... »

David N. Snyder wrote:It started pretty much from the beginning. Gotama became 'Buddha' (awakened one). Upatissa and Kolita became Sariputta and Moggallana. And there are numerous others mentioned in the Pali Canon that had name changes with the ordination (although apparently not all).

I imagine it has to do with the new role, the new identity in changing from a lay man to the life of a monk. And then the preceptor picking a name that might be appropriate to your temperament, personality, etc.
oh okay. that makes sense. i wasn't sure it was done in the suttas other than the buddha. since it was from day one it's not strange then. i just always notice it when reading about certain masters and i get confused when i read about them and different authors use different names. the reasoning behind it makes sense as well. i assumed as much. give up your old name and life to more fully embody your new role as a monk and all that.
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Kim OHara
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Re: when/why did renaming people start?

Post by Kim OHara »

alan... wrote:... the reasoning behind it makes sense as well. i assumed as much. give up your old name and life to more fully embody your new role as a monk and all that.
For what it's worth, the Christians used to do the same (maybe they still do - I don't know) when entering a monastery or nunnery. Plain old Pamela so-and-so might become Sister Veronica after a saint she identified with, or one her teacher thought she should try to emulate.

:namaste:
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Dhammanando
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Re: when/why did renaming people start?

Post by Dhammanando »

where someone ordains and they give them a new name. did this start in the time of the buddha? as far as i can tell ananda was still ananda after ordination and many others retained their names.

when and why did they start giving everyone new names?
Actually not every bhikkhu is given a new name. In Thailand, for example, many common male names are from Sanskrit and it’s quite common for the original name to be simply changed to its Pali form when the man ordains. For example, if a Thai is called Kasem (from the Sanskrit ‘kṣema’) there is a good chance that he’ll be given the name Khema or else a compound name that starts with Khema-.

However, it is true that most men are given a new name, but I don’t think it’s known when this practice began. Certainly there’s no evidence for it in the Canon and as far as I recall the practice isn’t described even in the commentaries.

My own guess is that it probably began when the sangha migrated to regions where people had names that ended in consonants or in unsuitable vowels. The Vinaya requires that the Pali formulas recited in the course of an ordination ceremony be correct in pronunciation, grammatical form, etc. and certain departures from the rules would render an ordination defective. In Pali every name ends in a, ā, i, ī, u or ū. If you have a name that ends in some other letter then there would be no established way of inflecting it according to the principles of Pali accidence and so it would need to be modified to a phonetically more suitable form. For example, you’d have to change Bruce to Brūsa and Fredrick to Vedrika. But then since such modifications would generate names that are meaningless in Pali, you might as well just give the man a completely new name.
David: Upatissa and Kolita became Sariputta and Moggallana.
But these weren’t new names. Moggallāna was Kolita’s brahminical gotra name (he was from the Maudgala gotra) and Sāriputta was Upatissa’s matronym (his mum was called Sārī). Most of the Buddha’s disciples of brahminical birth are called in the Suttas by their gotra names, for example all the various Kassapas, Kaccāyanas, Koṇḍaññas, Vacchas, Bharadvajas, Piṅgalas, etc.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmin_gotra_system" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

The Vinaya has a story which offers a clue as to why this is so. It tells of how Mahākassapa wished to ordain a man and summoned Ānanda to act as the announcing ācariya. Ānanda repeatedly tried to dodge taking part in the ceremony. Eventually he was summoned by the Buddha and asked to justify his conduct. Ānanda explained that if he were to take part the Vinaya would require him to announce Mahākassapa as the preceptor using the man’s personal name, Pipphali. But he held Kassapa in such high esteem that he had never called him Pipphali even when speaking about him in the third person. The Buddha then amended the rule, permitting gotra names to be used when making this announcement. And so from this it would appear to be a matter of courtesy that gotra names predominate over personal names in the Suttas. Perhaps this also accounts for why the Buddha’s personal name (given in the commentaries as Siddhattha) isn’t mentioned at all in the Suttas.
Rūpehi bhikkhave arūpā santatarā.
Arūpehi nirodho santataro ti.


“Bhikkhus, the formless is more peaceful than the form realms.
Cessation is more peaceful than the formless realms.”
(Santatarasutta, Iti 73)
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tiltbillings
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Re: when/why did renaming people start?

Post by tiltbillings »

[quote="DhammanandoBut these weren’t new names. Moggallāna was Kolita’s brahminical gotra name (he was from the Maudgala gotra) and Sāriputta was Upatissa’s matronym (his mum was called Sārī). Most of the Buddha’s disciples of brahminical birth are called in the Suttas by their gotra names, for example all the various Kassapas, Kaccāyanas, Koṇḍaññas, Vacchas, Bharadvajas, Piṅgalas, etc.[/quote]And if you are a Brahmin that is not a disciple of the Buddha, you might get called Snaggle-teeth, Kutadanta.
>> Do you see a man wise [enlightened/ariya] in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.<< -- Proverbs 26:12

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Re: when/why did renaming people start?

Post by beeblebrox »

I think the venerable Kondanna was the first one to receive a name... this is from the sutta, Setting in Motion the Wheel of Dhamma:
SN 56.11

[ . . . ] the Blessed One exclaimed: "So you really know, Kondañña? So you really know?" And that is how Ven. Kondañña acquired the name Añña-Kondañña — Kondañña who knows.
:anjali:
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