complex in
Bodh Gaya,
Bihar, India Circa 588 BCE, the 35-year-old
Siddhartha Gautama stayed for seven weeks (7x7 days = 49 days = 1
sattasattāha) at Uruvela (modern
Bodh Gaya), which is located in the present-day
Indian
state of
Bihar. According to the
Great Chronicle of Buddhas, he spent one week at each of seven successive locations there. During these seven weeks, he did not eat or drink, wash or excrete, or lie down. The specific locations were: • Week 1: the Week on the
Aparājita Throne (
Pallanka Sattāha). After
meditating under the
Bodhi Tree for seven days and nights, he attained
enlightenment, becoming the spiritual teacher known as
the Buddha and the founder of
Buddhism. • Week 2: the Week of the Gaze (
Animisa Sattāha) • Week 3: the Week on the Walk (
Cankama Sattāha) • Week 4: the Week at the Golden House (
Ratanāghara Sattāha) • Week 5: the Week at the
Ajapāla Banyan Tree • Week 6: the Week at
Mucalinda Lake (
Mucalinda Sattāha) • Week 7: the Week at the
Rājāyatana Tree (
Rājāyatana Sattāha) The seventh week was passed while sitting under a
rājāyatana (
B. cochinchinensis) tree, where the Buddha enjoyed the bliss of his newly attained
buddhahood. Upon the completion of this
sattasattāha, several important "firsts" in Buddhism took place at the
rājāyatana tree at Bodh Gaya, including: • the first words of
dharma to be uttered by the Buddha • the first
lay disciples (two passing merchants from
Pokkharavatī named
Tapussa and Bhallika) to
take refuge in the teachings of the Buddha • the first food offering to the Buddha (
rice cake and honey) after his enlightenment • the first
Buddhist monk's bowl • the first
relics of the Buddha to be distributed after his attainment of buddhahood According to Burmese folklore, Tapussa and Bhallika (the two passing merchants who became the Buddha's first lay disciples) later returned to their home in Okkalapa (
Lower Burma), where they built a
cetiya on
Singuttara Hill (the
Shwedagon Pagoda), where they enshrined the hair relics given to them by the Buddha. ==Gallery==