Kushinagar,
Kusinagar or
Kusinara is a town and a
nagar panchayat in
Kushinagar district in the
Indian
state of
Uttar Pradesh. It is an important
Buddhist pilgrimage site, where
Gautama Buddha died.
Demographics
India
census, Kushinagar had a population of 17,982. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Kushinagar has an average literacy rate of 62%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 70%, and female literacy is 54%. In Kushinagar, 15% of the population is under 6 years of age.
Ancient history

Ancient Indian (Bharata) cities and Places(Title and location names are in
English.)
In ancient times, it was known as
Kushavati (Jatakas). It finds mention in epic
Ramayana as the city of
Kusha the son of
Rama, the famous king of
Ayodhya.
Kushinagar was a celebrated center of the
Malla kingdom of ancient India. Later, it would be known as
Kushinara, one of the most important four holy sites for Buddhists. At this location, near the
Hiranyavati River,
Gautama Buddha attained
Parinirvana (or 'Final Nirvana') after falling ill from eating a meal of a species of mushroom.
Many of the ruined
stupas and
viharas here date back to 3rd century BCE - 5th century CE when prosperity was at its peak. The
Mauryan emperor
Ashoka is known to have contributed to significant construction at this site.
Prior to its rediscovery in the 19th century, there was a silence of more than half a millennium at Kasia. Due to violent invasions, Kushinagar lost its vitality and eventually was neglected.
Visits by the Buddha to Kushinagar
At the time of the Buddha, Kushinagar was the capital of the
Mallas, and the scene of the Buddha's death. It was twenty-five
yojanas from
Rajagaha (DA.ii.609; acc. to Fa Hsien, p. 40, it was twenty-four yojanas from
Kapilavatthu) and lay on the high road from Alaka to Rájagaha, the road taken by Bávarí's disciples (SN.v.1012). At that time it was a small city, "a branch-township with wattle-and-daub houses in the midst of the jungle," and Ananda was, at first, disappointed that the Buddha should have chosen it for his
Parinibbana. But the Buddha, by preaching the Maha-Sudassana Sutta, pointed out to him that in ancient times it had been
Kusavati, the royal city of Maha-Sudassana (D.ii.146).

Makutabandhana, the cremation-site of Gautama Buddha's body
It is said that the Buddha had three reasons for coming to Kusinárá to die:
- Because it was the proper venue for the preaching of the Mahá-Sudassana Sutta;
- Because Subhadda would visit him there and, after listening to his sermon, would develop meditation and become an arahant while the Buddha was still alive; and
- Because the brahman Doha would be there, after the Buddha's death, to solve the problem of the distribution of his relics (UdA.402f; DA.ii.573f6).
Between Kusinara and
Pava, three
gavutas away (DA.ii.573) - from where the Buddha came to Kusinára on his last journey from
Rajagaha, stopping at various places - lay the stream of
Kakuttha on the banks of which was the
Ambavana; beyond that was the
Hiraññavati river, and near the city, in a south-westerly direction, lay the
Upavattana, the Sala-grove of the Mallas, which the Buddha made his last resting-place (UdA.238; DA.ii.572f).
After the Buddha's death his body was carried into the city by the northern gate and out of the city by the eastern gate; to the east of the city was Makutabandhana, the shrine of the Mallas, and there the body was cremated. For seven days those assembled at the ceremony held a festival in honour of the relics (D.ii.160f).
As the scene of his death, Kusinara became one of the four holy places declared by the Buddha (in the
Mahaparinibbana Sutta (ii. 140) ) to be fit places of pilgrimage for the pious, the other three being
Kapilavatthu,
Buddhagaya and
Isipatana (D.ii.140).
Mention is made of other visits paid to Kusinárá by the Buddha, prior to that when his death took place. Thus, once he went there from Ápana and having spent some time at Kusinárá, proceeded to Átumá. The Mallas of Kusinárá were always great admirers of the Buddha, even though not all of them were his followers, and on the occasion of this visit they decided that any inhabitant of Kusinárá who failed to go and meet the Buddha and escort him to the city, would be fined five hundred. It was on this occasion that Roja the Mallan was converted and gave to the Buddha and the monks a supply of green vegetables and pastries (Vin.i.247f). During some of these visits the Buddha stayed in a wood called Baliharana, and there he preached two of the Kusinárá Suttas (A.i.274f; v.79f) and the "Kinti" Sutta (M.ii.238f). A third Kusinárá Sutta he preached while staying at Upavattana. (A.ii.79; for another discourse to some noisy monks at Upavattana, see Ud.iv.2).
According to a late tradition, one-eighth of the Buddha's relics were deposited in a cairn in Kusinárá and honoured by the Mallas (D.ii.167; Bu.xxviii.3).
In
Hiouen Thsang's day there still existed towers and Sarighárámas erected to mark the spots connected with the Buddha's last days and obsequies at Kusinárá. According to his account (Beal. op. cit.li. lii. n) Kusinárá was nineteen yojanas from Vesáli.
A copper plate belonging to the thúpa erected at the site of the Buddha's death has recently been discovered (CAGI.i.714).
there are many pilgrims over out sides.
Rediscovery

The Parinirvana Temple with the Parinirvana Stupa, Kushinagar
The remains of the Parinirvana Stupa and Parinirvana Temple, when rediscovered, were covered in a 40 foot high mound of bricks surrounded by a dense thorny forest. After E. Buchanan, an officer of the
East India Company, arrived in Kasia in the course of his survey-work, H. H. Wilson, in 1854, made the suggestion that ancient Kushinagar and Kasia were the same. Work resumed around 1861–1862 when General Alexander Cunningham, an archaeological surveyor, would prove the site to be that of Gautama Buddha's passing. A British officer named Mr. A.C.L. Carlleyle followed suit. Excavations began in the late 1800s and many important remnants of the main site such as the Matha Kuar and Ramabhar stupa were unveiled.
Today
Today, Kushinagar is a much-frequented pilgrimage site for Indian and foreign tourists, and temples have been constructed by Indian, Chinese, Sri Lankan, Thai, Burmese, South Korean, Tibetan and Japanese Buddhists, alongside the ruins of monasteries and stupas. Kushinagar is one of the main four
Buddhist pilgrimage sites related to the life of
Gautama Buddha. The other three are
Lumbini,
Bodh Gaya, and
Sarnath.
Today, in Kushinagar, there are 1 PG College and one Intermediate college having very good teaching staff. Today, Kushinagar have many hotels and restaurants facility for providing tourist a better place.
The two places most frequently visited in Kushinagar are the Mahaparinirvana Stupa, which is built on the place of Buddha's
Mahaparinirvana (Great
Nirvana or passing away), and the place of his cremation, which is 1.6 km away. Close to the Mahaparinirvana Stupa is located a 1500 year old Buddha-image of the Buddha as he attained Parinirvana. The Mahaparinirvana Stupa is surrounded by ruins of ancient monasteries.
The Maitreya Project plans to build a 500ft/152m bronze statue of
Maitreya Buddha near Kushinagar (previously planned in
Bodhgaya).

The ancient excavated Buddha-image inside the Parinirvana Temple, Kushinagar