The KhuddakapÃÂá¹Âha (PÃÂli for "short passages"; abbreviated as "Khp") is a TheravÃÂda Buddhist scripture, the first collection of discourses (suttas) in the Khuddaka NikÃÂya of the PÃÂli Canon. It may have originated as a handbook for novice monks composed from excerpts of canonical texts.
The KhuddakapÃÂá¹Âha was excluded from the lists of canonical texts collected by the TheravÃÂda Dëgha- and Majjhima-bhÃÂá¹Âakas as well as the Chinese translation of Buddhaghosa's commentaries. This suggests that the KhuddakapÃÂá¹Âha had not attained canonical status until relatively late in the process of fixing the TheravÃÂda canon, and may be one of the last texts added to the Canon itself.
All but one of the discourses it collects are found elsewhere in the PÃÂli CanonâÂÂthe Nidhi Kanda is not extant in the current PÃÂli Canon but does include text [Khp 8.9] quoted in the Abhidhamma Piá¹Âaka's KathÃÂvatthu [Kv 351,18-21].) It may have originated as a handbook for novices composed from excerpts from the canon, and was accepted as canonical because it consisted of texts that were already part of the Canon. The KhuddakapÃÂá¹Âha is not widely used or studied in modern TheravÃÂda countries, but several of its texts are included in a common Paritta collection (the Maha Pirit Potha), suggesting that this collection originated with the KhuddakapÃÂá¹Âha or a precursor text.
The collection is composed of the following nine discourses: