The Buddhist Councils were landmark assemblies of Buddhist monks convened to preserve, compile, and settle disputes about the teachings (Dhamma) and monastic discipline (Vinaya) of Gautama Buddha.
There were four major Buddhist Councils held in ancient India — and they are one of the most frequently tested topics in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, State PSC, and all Ancient Indian History-based competitive exams. From the First Council at Rajagriha immediately after the Buddha’s death to the Fourth Council under Kanishka in Kashmir, this page gives you a complete, detailed account of all four councils with their locations, presiding monks, royal patrons, and exam-critical outcomes.
⚡ Quick Facts
- First Council (483 BCE): Rajagriha (Rajgir), Bihar — under King Ajatashatru; presided by Mahakassapa; Ananda recited Sutta Pitaka, Upali recited Vinaya Pitaka.
- Second Council (383 BCE): Vaishali, Bihar — under King Kalasoka; resulted in the first schism — Theravada vs Mahasanghika.
- Third Council (~250 BCE): Pataliputra (Patna), Bihar — under Emperor Ashoka; presided by Moggaliputta Tissa; Abhidhamma Pitaka compiled; missions sent to 9 regions.
- Fourth Council (1st–2nd century CE): Kundalvana, Kashmir — under King Kanishka I (Kushan); Vasumitra presided; Ashvaghosha Vice-President; Mahayana Buddhism codified.
- Mnemonic: Rajgir → Vaishali → Patna → Kashmir (order of councils).
Ananda vs Upali: Ananda recited the Sutta Pitaka (teachings); Upali recited the Vinaya Pitaka (discipline) — these are swapped in many wrong options. Presiding monks: Mahakassapa presided over the 1st Council — NOT Ananda. Moggaliputta Tissa presided over the 3rd Council — NOT Ashoka (Ashoka was the patron, not president). Fourth Council location: Kashmir (Kundalvana) is the most accepted answer — NOT Jalandhar or Sri Lanka, though some sources dispute this. Schism timing: The first formal schism happened at the 2nd Council — not the 4th (the 4th solidified the Hinayana/Mahayana split which began earlier).
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🏛️ All Four Buddhist Councils — Complete Table
| # ↕ | Council ↕ | Date ↕ | Location | Royal Patron | Presiding Monk(s) | Key Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | First Buddhist Council | 483 BCE | Rajagriha (Rajgir), Bihar Sattapanni Cave |
King Ajatashatru Haryanka dynasty |
Mahakassapa (President) Ananda (Sutta Pitaka) Upali (Vinaya Pitaka) |
Compiled Sutta Pitaka & Vinaya Pitaka; foundation of oral Buddhist canon; 500 Arahants; 7-month duration; no schism yet |
| 2nd | Second Buddhist Council | 383 BCE | Vaishali, Bihar ~100 years after 1st |
King Kalasoka (Kakavarna) Shishunaga dynasty |
Yasa of Kausambi Led orthodox monks; 700 monks attended |
First schism in Buddhism — Orthodox = Theravada (Sthaviravada); Reformers = Mahasanghika (accepted 10 controversial practices); earliest root of Mahayana |
| 3rd | Third Buddhist Council | ~250 BCE | Pataliputra (Patna), Bihar | Emperor Ashoka Maurya dynasty |
Moggaliputta Tissa (President) Ashoka’s spiritual adviser |
Compiled Abhidhamma Pitaka (completing Tipitaka); purged heterodox monks; sent missions to 9 regions — Mahinda to Sri Lanka, Sanghamitta with Bodhi tree sapling |
| 4th | Fourth Buddhist Council | 1st–2nd century CE | Kundalvana, Kashmir (Jalandhar & Sri Lanka also cited) |
King Kanishka I Kushan dynasty |
Vasumitra (President) Ashvaghosha (Vice-President) |
Compiled Mahavibhasha commentary; formal codification of Mahayana Buddhism; permanent Hinayana (Theravada) vs Mahayana split |
📚 Three Baskets of Tipitaka — Compiled Across Councils
| Pitaka (Basket) | What It Contains | Compiled At | Recited / Compiled By |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vinaya Pitaka | Rules of monastic discipline for monks and nuns | First Council (483 BCE) | Upali |
| Sutta Pitaka | Teachings and discourses of the Buddha | First Council (483 BCE) | Ananda |
| Abhidhamma Pitaka | Philosophical and analytical analysis of Dhamma | Third Council (~250 BCE) | Moggaliputta Tissa |
⚡ Key Schisms in Buddhism
| Schism | Council | Result | Spread To |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Schism | Second Council (383 BCE, Vaishali) | Theravada (Sthaviravada — orthodox) vs Mahasanghika (reformers) | Root of later Hinayana-Mahayana division |
| Second Major Division | Fourth Council (1st–2nd century CE, Kashmir) | Hinayana (Theravada — conservative) vs Mahayana (liberal, northern) | Hinayana → Sri Lanka, SE Asia; Mahayana → China, Japan, Korea, Tibet |
⚖️ Compare Two Buddhist Councils
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
Held at the Sattapanni Cave, Rajagriha (Rajgir), Bihar — immediately after Buddha’s Mahaparinirvana at Kushinagar. Royal patron: King Ajatashatru (Haryanka dynasty, who killed his own father Bimbisara). President: Mahakassapa (most senior monk). Two key recitations: Ananda recited the Sutta Pitaka (teachings) — he was Buddha’s closest attendant for 25 years with exceptional memory; Upali recited the Vinaya Pitaka (monastic rules). Duration: 7 months; 500 Arahants attended. The entire canon was preserved orally — no writing yet. No schism at this stage.
Held at Vaishali (Bihar), 100 years after the First Council. Royal patron: King Kalasoka (also called Kakavarna; Shishunaga dynasty). Yasa of Kausambi led the orthodox monks. The dispute: Monks of the Vajji clan (Vajjiputtakas) from Vaishali practised 10 controversial rules — including accepting gold/silver (money) and eating at improper times. Yasa and the orthodox monks rejected these. Result: First formal schism — orthodox monks = Theravada (Sthaviravada); reformers = Mahasanghika (Great Community) — the earliest precursor to Mahayana Buddhism. 700 monks attended.
Held at Pataliputra (Patna), Bihar under Emperor Ashoka. President: Moggaliputta Tissa — Ashoka’s spiritual guide and the leading Buddhist scholar. Key outcomes: (1) Abhidhamma Pitaka compiled — completing the Tipitaka; (2) Purification of the Sangha — thousands of fake/heterodox monks expelled; (3) Buddhist missions sent to 9 regions — most importantly, Mahinda (Ashoka’s son/disciple) brought Theravada Buddhism to Sri Lanka; Sanghamitta carried a Bodhi tree sapling to Sri Lanka; Dharmarakshita went to Greece and Western Asia. This council marks the globalisation of Buddhism.
Held at Kundalvana, Kashmir under King Kanishka I (Kushan dynasty). President: Vasumitra; Vice-President: Ashvaghosha (great Buddhist philosopher-poet; author of Buddhacharita). Key outcome: Compilation of the Mahavibhasha — a massive commentary on the Abhidharma Pitaka. Formal codification and spread of Mahayana Buddhism. Permanent division: Hinayana (Theravada — conservative; southern path to Sri Lanka, SE Asia) vs Mahayana (liberal; northern path to China, Japan, Korea, Tibet). Note: The Theravada tradition does not accept this as a valid council as it was dominated by Sarvastivada supporters.
Birth: 563 BCE at Lumbini, Nepal. Enlightenment (Bodhi): 527 BCE at Bodh Gaya, Bihar (under the Pipal/Bodhi tree). First Sermon (Dhammachakkappavattana Sutta): Sarnath, Varanasi — preached to the Panchavargiya (Five Disciples). Mahaparinirvana (Death): 483 BCE at Kushinagar, Uttar Pradesh. First Council: held immediately after the death in 483 BCE at Rajagriha. The Tipitaka was initially oral — it was first committed to writing in Sri Lanka (~1st century BCE) under King Vattagamani (Valagamba).
Four locations in order: “Rajgir Vaishali Patna Kashmir”
1st = Rajgir (483 BCE, Ajatashatru, Mahakassapa) | 2nd = Vaishali (383 BCE, Kalasoka, Yasa) — First Schism | 3rd = Patna (250 BCE, Ashoka, Moggaliputta Tissa) — Missions | 4th = Kashmir (1st–2nd CE, Kanishka, Vasumitra) — Mahayana
Who recited what at the 1st Council: “Ananda Said, Upali Disciplined”
Ananda = Sutta Pitaka (Teachings/Dhamma) | Upali = Vinaya Pitaka (Monastic Discipline)
Remember schism sequence: 2nd Council = First Schism (Theravada vs Mahasanghika) → 4th Council = Final Split (Hinayana vs Mahayana). The split deepened across 700 years.
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The First Buddhist Council was held at Rajagriha (Rajgir), Bihar in 483 BCE, under the patronage of King Ajatashatru of the Haryanka dynasty. It was convened immediately after the Mahaparinirvana of the Buddha. Mahakassapa presided; Ananda recited the Sutta Pitaka; Upali recited the Vinaya Pitaka.
The Second Buddhist Council (383 BCE, Vaishali, under King Kalasoka) resulted in the first formal schism in Buddhism. The Vajjiputtaka monks adopted 10 controversial practices; orthodox monks (led by Yasa of Kausambi) rejected these. The orthodox group maintained Theravada; the reformers formed Mahasanghika — the earliest forerunner of Mahayana Buddhism.
The Third Buddhist Council (~250 BCE) at Pataliputra was presided over by Moggaliputta Tissa — the leading Buddhist scholar and spiritual adviser to Emperor Ashoka. The council compiled the Abhidhamma Pitaka (completing the Tipitaka), purified the Sangha, and organised dispatch of Buddhist missionaries to nine regions including Mahinda to Sri Lanka.
The Fourth Buddhist Council (1st–2nd century CE, Kundalvana, Kashmir, under Kanishka of the Kushan dynasty) formally codified Mahayana Buddhism and solidified the permanent division into Hinayana (Theravada — conservative, southern) and Mahayana (liberal, northern). Theravada spread to Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia; Mahayana spread to China, Japan, Korea, and Tibet.
At the First Buddhist Council (Rajagriha, 483 BCE), Ananda — the Buddha’s closest personal attendant for 25 years — recited the Sutta Pitaka (teachings and discourses). Upali, foremost in monastic discipline, recited the Vinaya Pitaka (rules for monks and nuns). Mahakassapa presided. The Abhidhamma Pitaka was compiled much later at the Third Council.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The four Buddhist Councils were major assemblies of Buddhist monks convened to preserve, compile, and clarify the teachings (Dhamma) and monastic rules (Vinaya) of Gautama Buddha. The First Council (483 BCE, Rajagriha) compiled the Sutta and Vinaya Pitakas shortly after the Buddha’s death. The Second Council (383 BCE, Vaishali) addressed disciplinary disputes and produced Buddhism’s first major schism. The Third Council (250 BCE, Pataliputra) under Emperor Ashoka completed the Tipitaka and organised the spread of Buddhism across Asia. The Fourth Council (1st–2nd century CE, Kashmir) under King Kanishka formalised the division into Hinayana and Mahayana Buddhism and produced the Mahavibhasha commentary.
The Tipitaka (Pali for “Three Baskets”) is the complete canonical scripture of Theravada Buddhism. The three baskets are: the Vinaya Pitaka (monastic discipline — compiled at the First Council by Upali), the Sutta Pitaka (discourses and teachings — compiled at the First Council by Ananda), and the Abhidhamma Pitaka (philosophical analysis of Dhamma — compiled at the Third Council by Moggaliputta Tissa under Ashoka’s patronage). The Tipitaka was initially preserved orally and only committed to writing in Sri Lanka around the 1st century BCE during the reign of King Vattagamani (Valagamba).
Emperor Ashoka (r. 268–232 BCE) was the most important royal patron of Buddhism in ancient India. After the Kalinga War (261 BCE), Ashoka converted to Buddhism, embraced ahimsa, and hosted the Third Buddhist Council at Pataliputra (~250 BCE). From this council, he sent Buddhist missionaries to nine regions: most significantly, his son Mahinda brought Theravada Buddhism to Sri Lanka, his daughter Sanghamitta brought the Bodhi tree sapling, and missions went to Myanmar, Thailand, Central Asia, Greece, Egypt, and North Africa. Ashoka’s edicts on pillars and rocks spread Buddhist principles across his empire. He also built stupas, viharas, and thousands of pillars across India.
The Buddhist Councils are among the most frequently tested topics in UPSC Prelims (Ancient Indian History), SSC CGL, State PSC (Bihar, UP, Odisha, Karnataka), and all ancient history sections. Key tested facts include: the location and royal patron of each council (Rajagriha-Ajatashatru, Vaishali-Kalasoka, Pataliputra-Ashoka, Kashmir-Kanishka), who recited what at the First Council (Ananda for Sutta, Upali for Vinaya), the First Schism at the Second Council (Theravada vs Mahasanghika), completion of Tipitaka at the Third Council and Ashoka’s missionary activity, and the Mahayana-Hinayana split at the Fourth Council. Questions also test the presiding monks: Mahakassapa (1st), Yasa (2nd), Moggaliputta Tissa (3rd), Vasumitra and Ashvaghosha (4th). Use the mnemonic “RAJGIR VAISHALI PATNA KASHMIR” to fix the order.