Buddhist Councils

by Hla Min

Updated : June 2026

  • According to the Theravada (Way of the Elders) Tradition, there have been six Buddhist Councils.
  • The Fifth Buddhist Council was held in Mandalay, Burma. The Pali Canon was enshrined in Stone Inscriptions ကျောက်စာ by the team led by ရသေ့ကြီးဦးခန္တီ
  • The Sixth Buddhist Council was held at Kaba Aye (World Peace) Pagoda, Rangoon, Burma from 1954 – 1956. The Presiding Sayadaws include Nyaung Yan Sayadaw (ညောင်မ်းဆရာတော်) Ma Soe Yein Sayadaw (မစိုးရိမ်ဆရာတော်) Mahasi Sayadaw (မဟာစည်ဆရာတော်) and Mingun Tipitaka Sayadaw (မင်းကွန်းတိပိဋကဆရာတော်)
Nyaung Yan Sayadaw
Sangha Maha Nayaka for Sixth Buddhist Council

Tipitaka တိပိဋက

  • It is a Pali term. It is commonly rendered as “Three Baskets” :
  • Vinaya (Monastic rules of conduct) ဝိနည်း
  • Sutta (Discourses) သုတ္တန်
  • Abhidhamma (Ultimate reality) အဘိဓမ္မာ

Buddhist Councils သံဂါယနာ

U Silananda
  • According to the Theravada tradition, there are six Buddhist Councils.
  • The First, Second and Third Councils were held in India.
  • The Fourth Council (which recorded the teachings on palm leaves) was held in Ceylon.
  • The Fifth Council was held in Mandalay, Burma. U Khanti inscribed the Tipitaka on marble slabs. It was featured as the World’s Largest Book in Ripley’s “Believe it or not”.
  • The Sixth Council was held in Rangoon, Burma. Tipitaka was reconfirmed and published as printed texts. Selected Pali texts were also translated into Burmese.

First Buddhist Council

Source : U Silananda

  • Date : 3 months and 5 days (Sasana Era)
  • Place : Rajagaha (India)
  • King : Ajasattha
  • Leader : Mahakassapa Thera
  • Number of Monks : 500
  • Duration : 7 months
  • Accomplishment :
    Collected, examined, classified, and recorded orally the Buddha’s Teachings
  • Ashin Maha Kassapa acted as the Chief Questioner.
  • Ashin Upali recited Vinaya.
  • Ashin Ananda recited Sutta and Abhidhamma.
  • 500 Arahants confirmed Buddha’s teachings.

References :

  • Culavagga-Pali pp. 479 – 490
  • Dipavamsa 1.24; 5.4
  • Mahavamsa 3.26 – 41
  • Vinaya Atthakatha I 2 – 25
  • Digha-Attahakatha I 3-26

Second Buddhist Council

Source : U Silananda

  • Date : 100 (Sasana Era)
  • Place : Vesali (India)
  • King : Kalasoka
  • Leader : Yasa Thera (Vinaya Athakatths)
    Revata Thera (Mahavamsa)
  • Number of Monks : 700
  • Duration : 8 months
  • Accomplishment :
    Reaffirmed the Texts accepted at the 1st Council after a group of monks tried to relax the rules of discipline (oral)

References :

  • Culavagga-Pali pp. 490 – 508
  • Dipavamsa 5.30
  • Mahavamsa 4.9 – 64
  • Vinaya Atthakatha I 25 – 29

Third Buddhist Council

Source : U Silananda

  • Date : 234 (Sasana Era)
    310 BC
  • Place : Pataliputta (India)
  • King : Asoka
  • Leader : Mogallaputta-Tissa Thera
  • Number of Monks : 1000
  • Duration : 9 months
  • Accomplishment :
    Reaffirmed the Texts accepted at the previous Councils. The Kattavatthu (5th book of Abdhidhamma) is added (oral)

References :

  • Dipavamsa 7.34-43, 44-59
  • Mahavamsa 5.228-279
  • Vinaya Atthakatha I 29 – 78

Fourth Buddhist Council

Source : U Silananda

  • Date : 450 (Sasana Era)
    94 BC
  • Place : Alokavihara (Sri Lanka)
  • King : Vattagamani Abhaya
  • Number of Monks : 500
  • Accomplishment :
    Wrote the Buddha’s Teachings together with the Commentaries on palm leaves

References :

  • Vajirabuddhitika 543
  • Mahavamsa 33.100-101

Fifth Buddhist Council

Source : U Silananda

  • Date : April 5, 1871 (*)
  • Place : Mandalay (Burma)
  • King : Mindon
  • Leader : Jagara Thera
  • Number of Monks : 2400
  • Duration : 5 months (recitation)
    Began on April 14, 1871
    Ended on September 9, 1871
  • Accomplishment :
    Reaffirmed the Texts accepted at the previous Councils and wrote them on 729 marble slabs.

References :

  • Burmese Chronicles

(*) 1853 – 59 Writing on palm leaves in gold-color ink, ink and stylus – over 200 volumes.

Began writing on marble slabs on October 26, 1859. Ended writing on marble slabs on May 4, 1868. Took 7 years, 6 months and 19 days.

Seven books of Abidhamma on 208 slabs.

Slab size : 5 feet high, 3 feet across, 5 inches thick and about 90 lines long

Ripley’s “Believe It or Not” named it the “Largest Book in the World”.

Sixth Buddhist Council

Source : U Silananda

  • Date : May 1954 – 56
  • Place : Rangoon (Burma)
  • Prime Minister : U Nu
  • Leader : Revata Thera
  • Number of Monks : 2500
  • Duration : Two years for the Pali Texts
  • Accomplishment :
    Reaffirmed the Texts accepted at the previous Councils.
    Editions of Pali Texts, Commentaries and Sub-commentaries.

References :

  • Sangayana Album

Editor’s Notes :

  • The Sixth Buddhist Council was held in Kaba Aye Pagaoda, Rangoon.
  • 2500 Sayadaws from Burma and neighboring Theravada Buddhist nations re-confirmed Buddha’s teachings.
  • Mahasi Sayadaw U Sobhana acted as the Chief Questioner.
Mahasi & Mingun
  • Mingun Sayadaw Ashin Vicittacarabhimvamsa acted as the Chief Reciter.
  • Mingun Sayadaw’s memory feat was recognized in the Guinness Book of World Records (in the mid-50s).

Tipitaka Examination

Background

  • Burma wanted to host the Sixth Buddhist Council.
  • The Sayadaws visited neighboring Theravada countries to seek advice and to solicit participation in the Council to celebrate 2500 years of Sasana.
  • The Theravada Sayadaws expressed the need for a Tipitaka Sayadaw.

Burma invited interested Sayadawa to sit for Oral and Written Examination over four years (or more)

  • Vinaya
  • Sutta
  • Abhidhamma (Part One)
  • Abhidhamma (Part Two)

Mingun Tipitaka Sayadaw U Vicittacara

Mingun Sayadaw
  • He served as an Examiner for the first Tipitaka examination.
  • One Sayadaw passed the Vinaya, but said that he would not take further examinations to concentrate on his Practice of the Dhamma.
  • Sir U Thwin requested Mingun Sayadaw to take the Tipitaka examination as preparation for the Sixth Buddhist Council.
  • Mingun Sayadaw passed with Distinction in all subjects, and was awarded “Tipitakadara Bandakarika”.

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