- Story of Kauṇḍinya
- Story of Kāśisundaraka (Kṣāntivādin)
- The story of the two merchants
- The story of the thirsty caravan
- The story of the merchant Dhanaratha
- The story of Saṃdhāna, the householder
- The story of the tortoise
- The story of the king Vajrabāhu
- The story of Maitrabala
- The story of Nandapāla the Potter (= Ghaṭīkarasutta, MN 81, cf. MV I 319ff.)
- Yaśodharā brings forth a son
- The story of the great thief
- Yaśodharā seeks to bring the Buddha back to her
- The story of Ṛṣyaśṛṅga
- Yaśodharā attempts to commit suicide
- The story of the Kinnara and the Kinnarī
- Conversion of Yaśodharā
- The story of the two Ābhīrīs
- Story of Śaṅkha and Likhita
- Story of the beggar (concerning a previous birth of King Bhadrika)
- The story of Madhuvāsiṣṭha
- The story of the royal barber
- Another story of a barber
- Upāli is the foremost among those who master and know the Vinaya
- Untrue announcement of the death of the Buddha and the birth of Ānanda
- Ānanda's conversion
- The story of the king Kirātas
- Ānanda follows the Buddha and makes an exhibition of mathematical knowledge
- The story of the astronomer
- The story of the rice, the two patridges and the sugar-cane
- The story of the physician
- The Buddha chooses Ānanda as servant
- The story of Bhānumān and Bhānumantaḥ
- Ānanda is the foremost among the learned monks
- Famine in Rājagṛha
- Devadatta strives to win magical power
- Daśabalakāśyapa teaches to Devadatta the way to obtain magical power
- Devadatta seduces Prince Ajātaśatru
- Maudgalyāyana informs the Buddha as Devadatta is aiming at the direction of the congregation
- Devadatta visits the Buddha and departs indignant
- The Buddha assembles the monks
- Devadatta decides to bring about schism in the congregation
- The behaviour of Devadatta is discussed in the congregation
- The behaviour of the four monks followers of Devadatta is discused in the congregation
- The monks inform the Buddha of the result of the motion (jñapti).
- Devadatta loses his magical powers
- The story of an out-caste versed in magic and of a brāhmaṇa student
- The Buddha goes to Gayā
- The story of a mango tree
- The Buddha in Rājagṛha
- The Buddho grows ill
- The story of a gṛhapati and his son
- The sichness of the Buddha. The Buddha heals Devadatta
- The story of a Sage and of an ungrateful elephant
- The story of Mahendrasena
- The story of a lord of monkeys and of a maker of garlands
- The story of a lord of a dārukoṭaka bird and a lion
- The story of a lord of a bear and a poor man
- Another story of a bear of a poor man
- The story of the king Śibi
- The story of Kalyāṇakārin
- The story of Viśākha
- The story of Viśvantara
- The story of Śroṇakoṭīviṃśā
- Ajātaśatru, impelled by Devadatta, seeks to take his father King Bimbisāra's life but fails in the attempt
- The Buddha, desiring to convert Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa, sends Maudgalyāyana to him, who appears to him in the orb of the sun, and talks to him of the Buddha
- Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa fills his bowl with food of extraordinary fragrance, which Mahāmaudgalyāyana carries back to the Buddha
- King Bimbisāra desires to see Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa
- Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa goes to Rājagṛha to visit Bimbisāra
- Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa and King Bimbisāra go together to the Bamboo grove in order to see the Buddha
- The Buddha converts Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa
- Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa gives himself to severe penances. The example of the lute
- Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa follows the advice of the Buddha, and in a short time becomes an arhat
- The discourse of Śroṇakoṭīviṃśa
- The story of Vipaśyin
- Rājagṛha's people begins tu murmur against Ajātaśatru and Devadatta
- The story of Kūla and Upakūla
- The story of a hunter and an ungrateful man
- The story of Nanda, the Mungoose
- King Bimbisāra makes exceeding grants to Ajātaśatru
- Ajātaśatru casts his father in prison, there to die of hunger
- The Buddha sends Maudgalyāyana to visit and comfort the old king
- The tardy repentance of Ajātaśatru and the death of Bimbisāra
- The story of a potter
- The distress of Ajātaśatru at the death of King Bimbisāra, the arrival of a dancer from the south, and the extraordinary effects of Buddha's smile
- Devadatta has himself gilt by gold
- The story of a crow and a golden cap (suvarṇakholā)
- Devadatta has in his feet the sign of the wheel imprinted with red hot iron
- The jackal measuring the step of an elephant with its own
- Devadatta calls a skilled master-mechanic and makes him construct a catapult in front of the Buddha's residence
- The workmen refuse to kill the Buddha, go away, sit down at his feet, and are convertef by him
- Devadatta perceives that the workmen and the mechanic too ran away, and manages himself to hurl a stone from the catapult at the Buddha
- The yakṣa Kumbhīra sacrifices his life in trying to arrest the stone, but a fragment strikes the Buddha on the foot
- The story of a hunter
- Jīvaka prescribes a very rare substance called gośīrṣacandana in order to stop the hemorrhage at the foot of the Buddha
- The hemorrhage does not stop, and Jīvaka prescribes the milk of a young woman
- Daśabalakāśyapa stops the hemorrhage
- The story of Dharmakāma
- The disappointment of Devadatta
- The story of a jackal and a crow
- The story of the two birds Dharma and Adharma
- The story of Sūryanemi the poet
- The story of the two jewellers
- The story of the elder son of a gṛhapati
- The story of a girl and an astrologer
- The very ferocious elephant of Ājātaśatru, Dhanapālaka by name
- Devadatta's attempt to kill the Buddha by means of the elephant Dhanapālaka
- The elephant Dhanapālaka follows submissively the Buddha, dies of grief and is reborn in the heaven of the four great kings
- Dhanapālaka in a previous birth
- The story of the king Dhṛtarāṣṭra, and his faithful captain Pūrṇamukha, etc.
- The story of Karadaṇḍī, the Sahasrayodha
- The story of a lion and his jackal-friend
- The story of a Mṛgī and Mṛgādhipati
- The story of a jackal competing with an elephant
- The story of Āgneya, the cat
- The story of a bull that got entangled other bulls into trouble by bad counsels
- The story of the leader of the monkeys
- The five causes of the division of the congregation
- Solicitudes of the Buddha
- Famine in Rājagṛha, division of the congregation and new rules imparted by Devadatta
- Śāriputra and Maudgalyāyana visit the Buddha and promise to him to restore the congregation
- The sermon on the four merituous men
- Śāriputra and Mahāmaudgalyāyana visit Devadatta and exhort the misguided monks to return to the true doctrine
- Many misled monks are led back to the Buddha and readmitted into the order without a word of reproach
- The story of a ṛṣi living in the country
- The story of a jackal, Śatadru by name
- devadatta gets angry with Kokālika and Khaṇḍadravya
- The story of the elephant
- The story of a leader of the thieves
- The fruit of monachal life in the visible world Ajātaśatru visits the Buddha
- Ajātaśatru asks the Buddha if it is possible to show any visible benefit to be derived from asceticism
- Ajātaśatru narrates how he propounded this same question to Pūraṇa Kāśyapa, etc., and any of them expounded him his own theory
- Maskarī Gośāliputra' theory
- Sañjayī Vairaṭṭīputra's theory
- Ajita Keśakambala's theory
- Nirgrantha Jñātiputra's theory
- Kakuda Kātyāyana's theory
- Ajātaśatru propounds the question to the Buddha
- Buddha's reply
- King Ajātaśatru, repented of the murdering of his father is finally gained over to the Buddha creed
- The Buddha, invited by King Ajātaśatru, regrets for the sin commited by his royal guest
- Buddha converses with Ajātaśatru, who grows more and more attached to him
- Devadatta, no more admitted into the palace, strucks the bhikṣuṇī Utpalavarṇā, who shortly after dies
- The story of the old sheep
- Devadatta is gained over the nihilistic doctrine of Pūraṇa Kāśyapa
- The Buddha blames Devadatta
- The new rules of Devadatta
- Devadatta is thrown into a pond
- Devadatta fails in his attempts to become King of the Śākyas, fills underneath his nails with a deadly poison, intending to scratch the Buddha's feet, dies and falls into hell
- The Buddha foretells that, on the expiration of a kalpa, Devadatta will become a Pratyekabuddha, Asthimān by name
- Śāriputra and Maudgalyāyana descend to hell to visit and comfort Devadatta
- Śāriputra and Maudgalyāyana visit in hell followers of Devadatta, Kokālika, etc., and Pūraṇa Kāśyapa
- The story of the bull and the ass
- The story of the bull and the jackal
- The story of the King Caitika and the two sons of the Purohita
- The story of the master-mechanic and his pupil
- The question of Upāli