Tipitakadhara Tipitakakovida Selection Examinations | |
Type: | Monastic examinations |
Test Admin: | Tipitakadhara Tipitaka Kovida Selection Examination Board, Ministry of Religious Affairs and Culture (Myanmar) |
Skills Tested: | five levels of reciting (Tipiṭakadhara) five levels of idea by writing (Tipiṭakakovida) |
Duration: | 33 days– from last week of December to third week of January |
Offered: | once a year |
Regions: | Myanmar |
Language: | Burmese |
Website: | |
The Tipiṭakadhara Tipiṭakakovida Selection Examinations (my|တိပိဋကဓရ တိပိဋကကောဝိဒ ရွေးချယ်ရေး စာမေးပွဲ) are the highest-level monastic examinations held annually in Burma since 1948, organized by the Ministry of Religious Affairs.[1] It tests the candidates' memory of Tripiṭaka (or "Three Baskets") both in oral (five levels) and in written components (five levels).[2] The examinations require candidates to display their mastery of "doctrinal understanding, textual discrimination, taxonomic grouping and comparative philosophy of Buddhist doctrine." A Sayadaw who has passed all levels of the examinations is often referred as the Sutabuddha .[3]
In order to held Sixth Buddhist council at Burma in the Buddhist era 2500, the other Theravada five countries asked Burma whether there was the Tripiṭaka reciter in Burma. Therefore, the Burmese government held the Tipiṭakadhara Tipiṭakakovida Selection Examinations since 1948. The examinations are so difficult that no one could pass until 1953.[4] Mingun Sayadaw became the first winner of the exam in 1953, and was appointed the position of Chaṭṭhasaṅgatisajaka (Chief Respondent) to answer the Dhamma questions asked by Mahasi Sayadaw.[5]
To take the examinations, the candidates must be only monks and novices who passed the examinations of Pathamagyi, Vinayavidu level, third level of Thamanaykyaw, or lecturer level of Cetiyangana and Sakyasiha.[1]
The recitation content includes a cumulative 8026 pages of Tripiṭaka:[1]
All texts are taken at the oral-based examination plus its relevant commentaries, sub-commentaries, and treatises.[1]
The whole examinations process takes 33 days in total – from last week of December to the third week of January – at the Kaba Aye Pagoda's Mahāpāsāṇa Cave in Yangon.
At the reciting part, candidates have to take a text for three days, and four times in the morning, and five times in the afternoon each day (25 minutes and 10-minute break per time). They will be prompted only five times in the whole day.
Those who passed the exam without being prompted are marked as "visiṭṭha" (distinguished).
Sayadaws who have passed five levels of ideology writing are awarded the degree of "Tipiṭakakovida", and the degree of "Tipiṭakadhara Tipiṭakakovida" is awarded to those who have passed all levels of the examination. Five years after receiving Tipiṭakadhara Tipiṭakakovida Degree, the Government of Myanmar offers him the title of Tipiṭakadhara Dhammabhanḍāgārika .
They are offered Sāsanā flags bearing the above emblems.[2]
See also: List of Sāsana Azani recipients.
The late Venerable Mingun Sayadaw is the first title-winner of the Tipiṭakadhara exam in Burma.[6] As of 2020, only 15 monks have passed both the oral and written components, who are recognized by the Burmese government as "Sāsana Azani" (pi|Sāsanājāneyya, lit. "Noble Hero of the Buddhist doctrine").[7]
The awarded 16 Tipiṭakadhara Tipiṭakakovida, Tipiṭakadhara Dhammabhanḍāgārika Sayadaws are as follows.[8] [5]
width=5% | No. | width=24% | Dharma name | width=18% | Common title | width=19% | Name in Burmese | width=5% | Pass year | width=30% | Location of study |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bhaddanta Vicittasārābhivaṃsa (1911–1993) | Mingun Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဝိစိတ္တသာရာဘိဝံသ (မင်းကွန်းဆရာတော်) | 1953 | Dhammanāda monastery, Mingun | ||||||
2 | Bhaddanta Neminda (1928–1991) | Pakkhoku Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ နေမိန္ဒ (ပခုက္ကူဆရာတော်) | 1959 | Mahāvisutārāma monastery, Mawlamyine | ||||||
3 | Bhaddanta Kosalla (1921–1995) | Pyay Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ကောသလ္လ (ပြည်ဆရာတော်) | 1963 | Pañcanikāya monastery, Yankin | ||||||
4 | Bhaddanta Sumaṅgalālaṅkāra (1946–2006) | Gandarum Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ သုမင်္ဂလာလင်္ကာရ (ဂန္ဓာရုံဆရာတော်) | 1973 | Mahāgadhāruṃ monastery, Mayangon | ||||||
5 | Bhaddanta Sīrindābhivaṃsa (1943 –) | Yaw Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ သီရိန္ဒာဘိဝံသ (ယောဆရာတော်) | 1984 | Mahāvisuddhāruṃ monastery, Bahan | ||||||
6 | Bhaddanta Vāyāmindābhivaṃsa (1955 –) | Yayzagyo Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဝါယာမိန္ဒာဘိဝံသ (ရေစကြိုဆရာတော်) | 1995 | Tipiṭaka monastery, Dagon | ||||||
7 | Bhaddanta Sīlakkhandhābhivaṃsa (1964 –) | Mawgyun Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ သီလက္ခန္ဒာဘိဝံသ (မော်ကျွန်းဆရာတော်) | 1999 | Tipiṭakanikāya monastery | ||||||
8 | Bhaddanta Vaṃsapālālaṅkāra (1965 –) | Myinmu Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဝံသပါလာလင်္ကာရ (မြင်းမူဆရာတော်) | 1999 | Tipiṭakanikāya monastery, Mingun | ||||||
9 | Bhaddanta Gandhamālālaṅkāra (1968 –) | Myingyan Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဂန္ဓမာလာလင်္ကာရ (မြင်းခြံဆရာတော်) | 2000 | Dhammanāda monastery, Mingun | ||||||
10 | Bhaddanta Sunada (1955 –) | Tipiṭakadhara Sunlun Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ သုနန္ဒ (စွန်းလွန်းဆရာတော်) | 2004 | Sulun Vipassanā monastery, Thingangyun | ||||||
11 | Bhaddanta Indapāla (1960 –) | Rammawadi Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဣန္ဒပါလ (ရမ္မာဝတီဆရာတော်) | 2004 | Tipiṭaka monastery, Dagon | ||||||
12 | Bhaddanta Abhijātābhivaṃsa (1968 –) | Sagaing Tipitaka Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ အဘိဇာတာဘိဝံသ (စစ်ကိုင်းဆရာတော်) | 2010 | Mahāsubodāruṃ monastery, Sagaing | ||||||
13 | Bhaddanta Indācariya (1964 –) | Butalin Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဣန္ဒာစရိယ (ဘုတလင်ဆရာတော်) | 2012 | Tipiṭakanikāya monastery, Mingun | ||||||
14 | Bhaddanta Vīriyānanda | Kanbawza Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဝီရိယာနန္ဒ (ကမ္ဗောဇဆရာတော်) | 2017 | Tipiṭakanikāya monastery, Dagon | ||||||
15 | Bhaddanta Paññāvaṃsābhivaṃsa | Kyaukpadaung Sayadaw | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ပညာဝံသာဘိဝံသ (ကျောက်ပန်းတောင်းဆရာတော်) | 2020 | Mahagandawinnikaya monastery, Dagon Myothit (East) | ||||||
16 | Bhaddanta Paññāsirīlaṅkāra | ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ပညာသိရီလင်္ကာရ | 2024 | Tipiṭakanikāya monastery, Dagon |