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Amda
3. Amjaņā Another name of Pamkappabhā, the fourth infernal region.1
1. Sth. 546, Jiv. 67, AnuCu. p. 35.
1. Amjaņāgiri (Añjanāgiri) A Disāhatthikūda, situated in Bhaddasālavaṇa, in the south-west of Mamdara(3).1
1. Jam. 103, Sth. 642.
2. Amjaņāgiri Presiding deity of Amjaņāgiri(1).1
1. Jam. 103.
Titthayara,
Amjuyă (Añjukā) First woman-disciple of the seventeenth Kumthu(1). She is also mentioned as Dāmiņi.2 1. Sam. 157.
2. Tir. 460.
1. Amjú (Añjū) Tenth chapter of the first section of Vivāgasuya.1
1. Vip. 2, SthA. p. 508.
sub-section of the second section of
2. Anjũ Fourth chapter of the ninth Ņāyādhammakahā.?
1. Jna. 157.
3. Amjū Daughter of a merchant of Hatthiņāura. She renounced the world and became a disciple of Titthayara Pāsa(1). After death she was born as the fourth principal wife of Sakka(3). 1. Ina. 157.
2. Bha. 406, Sth. 612.
4. Amjū Daughter of merchant Dhaņadeva(1) of Vaddhamāņapura. In her former life she was a prostitute in Indapura. Amjū was married to king Vijaya(22). She developed a venereal disease (yoniśūla) owing to the sins of her previous life as a prostitute. After assuming a number of births and deaths she will be ultimately born in a distinguished family in Savvatobhadda(6). There she will renounce the world and attain liberation.
1. Vip. 32, SthA. p. 508.
Amjadevi (Añjūdevi) Same as Amjü(4).1
1. Vip. 32.
1. Amda (Andaka) Third chapter of the first section of Ņāyādhammakabā.1
1. Ina. 5, JnaA. p. 10, Sam. 19, AvaCu. I. p. 132, AvaCu. II. p. 279.
2. Amda Third chapter of Kammavivágadasã, the first section of Vivāgasuya.1
1. Sth. 755, SthA. p. 505.
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