,
Thailand In the
Pāli Canon of
Theravāda Buddhism, is called . is one of the
Cāturmahārājika deva or "Four Great Heavenly Kings", each of whom rules over a specific direction. 's realm is the northern quadrant of the world, including the land of
Uttarakuru. According to some suttas, he takes his name from a region there called ; he also has a city there called Ālakamandā which is a byword for wealth. governs the
yakshas – beings with a nature between 'fairy' and 'ogre'. 's wife is named Bhuñjatī, and he has five daughters, Latā, Sajjā, Pavarā, Acchimatī, and Sutā. He has a nephew called , a yakkha, husband of the
nāga woman Irandatī. He has a chariot called Nārīvāhana. He is called
gadāvudha (Sanskrit:
gadāyudha) "armed with a club", but he only used it before he became a follower of the Buddha. has the name "Kuvera" from a name he had from a past life as a rich Brahmin mill-owner from Sri Lanka, who gave all the produce of one of his seven mills to charity, and provided alms to the needy for 20,000 years. He was reborn in the Cātummahārājikā heaven as a result of this good
karma. As with all the Buddhist deities, is properly the name of an office (filled for life) rather than a permanent individual. Each is mortal, and when he dies, he will be replaced by a new . Like other beings of the Cātummahārājika world, his lifespan is 90,000 years (other sources say nine million years). has the authority to grant the yakkhas particular areas (e.g., a lake) to protect, and these are usually assigned at the beginning of a 's reign. When
Gautama Buddha was born, became his follower, and eventually attained the stage of
sotāpanna, one who has only seven more lives before enlightenment. He often brought the Buddha and his followers messages from the gods and other humans, and protected them. He presented to the Buddha the verses, which Buddhists meditating in the forest could use to ward off the attacks of wild yakkhas or other supernatural beings who do not have faith in the Buddha. These verses are an early form of
paritta chanting.
Bimbisāra, King of
Magadha, after his death was reborn as a yakkha called Janavasabha in the retinue of . In the early years of Buddhism, was worshipped at trees dedicated to him as shrines. Some people appealed to him to grant them children. == In China ==