SAMYUTTA NIKAYA


The 'Samyutta Nikaya' ( 'SN', "Connected Discourses") is a Buddhist scripture, the third of the five nikayas, or collections, in the Sutta Pitaka, which is one of the "three baskets" that compose the Pali Tipitaka of Theravada Buddhism. Because of the abbreviated way parts of the text are written, the total number of suttas is unclear. The editior of the Pali Text Society edition of the text made it 2889, Bodhi in his translation has 2904, while the commentaries give 7762. A forthcoming study by Dr Rupert Gethin[1] gives the totals for the Burmese and Sinhalese editions as 2854 and 7656, respectively, and his own calculation as 6696; he also says the total in the Thai edition is unclear. The suttas are grouped into five vaggas, or sections. Each vagga is further divided into samyuttas, or chapters, each of which in turn contains a group of suttas on a related topic.
A similar collection, apparently translated from an earlier Sanskrit version, appears in the Chinese Buddhist canon. This is known as the ''Samyuktāgama'' or ''Zá Ahánjīng'' (雜阿含經); the Chinese name means "the mixed agama".

Contents
Translations
Divisions
References
See also
Notes
Bibliography
External links

Translations



★ ''The Book of the Kindred Sayings'', tr C. A. F. Rhys Davids & F. L. Woodward, 1917-30, 5 volumes, Pali Text Society[1], Lancaster

★ ''The Connected Discourses of the Buddha'', tr Bhikkhu Bodhi, 2000, Wisdom Publications, Somerville, MA, ISBN 0-86171-331-1; the Pali Text Society also issues a private edition of this for members only, which is its preferred translation

Divisions


The vaggas contained in this nikaya are (the numbering of chapters (samyuttas) here refers to the PTS and Burmese editions; the Sinhalese and Thai editions divide the text up somewhat differently):

Part I. 'Sagatha-vagga' (SN chapters 1-11)

:a collection of suttas containing verses (Pali, ''sagatha''), many shared by other parts of the Pali canon such as the Theragatha, Therigatha, Suttanipata, Dhammapada and the Jatakas.[2]

Part II. 'Nidana-vagga' (SN chapters 12-21)

:a collection of suttas primarily pertaining to causation (Pali, ''nidana'').

Part III. 'Khandha-vagga' (SN chapters 22-34)

:a collection of suttas primarily pertaining to the five aggregates (Pali, ''khanda'').

Part IV. 'Salayatana-vagga' (SN chapters 35-44)

:a collection of suttas primarily pertaining to the six sense bases (Pali, ''salayatana''), including the "Fire Sermon" (''Adittapariyaya Sutta'').

Part V. 'Maha-vagga' (SN chapters 45-56)

:the largest – that is, great (Pali, ''maha'') – collection consists of the following chapters:
::Ch 45. the Noble Eightfold Path
::Ch 46. the Seven Factors of Enlightenment
::Ch 47. the Four Establishment of Mindfulness
::Ch 48. the Faculties
::Ch 49. the Four Right Striving
::Ch 50. the Five Powers
::Ch 51. the Four Bases for Spiritual Power[3]
::Ch 52. Anuruddha discourses
::Ch 53. the Jhanas
::Ch 54. Mindfulness of Breathing
::Ch 55. Factors of Stream-entry
::Ch 56. the Truths

References


1. ''Journal of the Pali Text Society'', volume XXIX
2. Bodhi (2000), p. 69.
3. Bodhi (2000), pp. 1485-6, points out that the first seven chapters of the ''Maggavagga-samyutta'' pertain to the seven sets of qualities conducive to Enlightenment.

See also


Anguttara Nikaya

Buddhist texts

Digha Nikaya

Khuddaka Nikaya

Majjhima Nikaya
Notes

1. ''Journal of the Pali Text Society'', volume XXIX
2. Bodhi (2000), p. 69.
3. Bodhi (2000), pp. 1485-6, points out that the first seven chapters of the ''Maggavagga-samyutta'' pertain to the seven sets of qualities conducive to Enlightenment.

Bibliography


Digital Dictionary of Buddhism, entry on Zá Ahánjīng
External links


Samyutta Nikaya suttas in English at metta.lk

Samyutta Nikaya suttas in English at accesstoinsight.org

"Connected Discourses in Gandhāra" by Andrew Glass (2006 dissertation) - compares four Gandharan sutras related to the Samyutta Nikaya with Pali, Chinese and Tibetan versions.

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