Sanghapala
Sanghapāla was a famous Khmer monk who traveled to Southern and Northern Dynasties China.
He, along with the fellow Funan monk, Mandrasena, translated Buddhist scriptures such as the Vimuttimagga or Path to Freedom into Chinese.
He is one of the only two Cambodian monks whose translations currently figure in the Chinese''Tripitaka.''
Identification
In Chinese, he is known as Sengjia-Poluo. Sanghapala's Khmer name can also rendered as two possible Sanskrit equivalents, Sanghabara or Sanghavarman.Biography
Sanghapala was born in Funan in the year 460 AD, in the modern day Kingdom of Cambodia. He became a monk in his teens and traveled to China where he lived in Jiankang, nowadays Nanking, the capital city of Southern Qi dynasty during that time. He was discipled by Guṇavṛddhī, a certain Indian monk who had travelled to China during the reign of Emperor Wu of Liang who intended to propagate Buddhism to China as King Ashoka had done for India. He acquired the knowledge of many languages including Pali, Sanskrit and classical Chinese.He was then sponsored by the court of Jiankang to translate new works into Chinese as early as 506. Among others, Sanghapala was ordered to write a new translation known as Ayuwang jing, or the Scripture of King Aśoka from the original Ashokavadana, an Indian Sanskrit-language text that describes the birth and reign of the third Mauryan Emperor Ashoka. He worked as an official translator for 16 years and established offices in five different locations, one of which was now as "The Funan Desk".
Sanghapala died at the age of 65 in 524 AD.