SHAKYA

'ÅšÄkya' (Sanskrit) or 'Å›aka' (PÄli, pronounced "Shaka") is the name (derived from Sanskrit 'Å›akya', "capable, able") of an Indo-Aryan-speaking nation or janapada of the . The ÅšÄkyas formed independent tribes or kingdoms near the foothills of the HimÄlayas. The ÅšÄkya capital was Kapilavastu (PÄli: Kapilavatthu).
The most famous ÅšÄkya was the Buddha, a member of the ruling Gautama (PÄli: Gotama) clan of Lumbini, who is also known as "ÅšÄkyamuni" (PÄli: Å›akamuṇi, "sage of the Åšaka nation").
The ÅšÄkyas are mentioned in the accounts of the birth of the Buddha (e.g. MahÄvastu, c. end of 2nd century BCE) as part of the "solar race" – i.e., descendants of the legendary king (PÄli: OkkÄka):
:"There lived once upon a time a king of the ÅšÄkya, a scion of the solar race, whose name was Åšuddhodana. He was pure in conduct, and beloved of the ÅšÄkya like the autumn moon. He had a wife, splendid, beautiful, and steadfast, who was called the Great MÄyÄ, from her resemblance to MÄyÄ the Goddess." (''Buddhacarita'' of AÅ›vaghoá¹£a, I.1-2)
The Greeks, and many writers and scholars since, have connected them to the Scythians, or Åšaka as they were known in India from whom descended the Sogdiana. However, the Åšaka were not known in India before the 2nd century BCE, centuries after the last attested existence of the ÅšÄkyas. "ÅšÄkya" may nonetheless be possibly cognate with "Scythian" as a result of their shared Indo-Iranian heritage.
J.P. Mallory and Victor H. Mair have elaborated on the similarity between stupas and the tumulus funerary mounds of the Scythian steps, and the identity of the ÅšÄkyas with the Saka Scythians:

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Shakya coins

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