The Authentic Orthography
Infinite Light, Pure Land · Of unmeasured splendour; infinite light; the Buddha of the Pure Land Sukhāvatī.

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison
अमिताभ
The name in its original Buddhist form. Amitābha (अमिताभ) is attested in the source tradition — “Of unmeasured splendour; infinite light; the Buddha of the Pure Land Sukhāvatī.”. Its macron-length vowels carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
amitabha
Reduced to plain amitabha, the name loses everything that made it specific: macron-length vowels. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Amitābha
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Amitābha restores macron-length vowels, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Amitābha.com → xn--amitbha-v3a.com
The non-ASCII characters in Amitābha are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Amitābha.
How Amitābha travels from ancient script to the modern URL
Sanskrit bahuvrīhi compound a-mita ('unmeasured') + ābha ('light, splendor'); the name describes a Buddha whose light is boundless.
Infinite light; the Buddha of the Pure Land Sukhāvatī.
The IAST form Amitābha preserves the long ā and aspirated bh; the Devanagari form is not registrable in .com.
How Amitābha was spoken
Pure Land, Compassion, and Other-Power Salvation
Amitābha is the Buddha whose light has no limit and whose compassion refuses no one. In Mahāyāna Buddhism, especially the Pure Land traditions of East Asia, he presides over Sukhāvatī, the Blissful Land, a paradise where rebirth guarantees progress toward Buddhahood. He did not attain this realm for himself alone; as the monk Dharmākara he made forty-eight vows, promising that anyone who called his name with sincere faith would be welcomed into his land.
His cult transformed Buddhism from a primarily monastic path of self-cultivation into a devotional religion accessible to laypeople, sinners, and the spiritually exhausted. For many millions, the name Amitābha is itself the practice.
The Pure Land of Bliss, a paradise of gold trees, jeweled ponds, and ceaseless Dharma teaching.
As Dharmākara he vowed that even those with heavy karma could be reborn in Sukhāvatī through faith and name-recitation.
The invocation of his name — 'Namo Amitābhāya' or 'Namo Amituofo' — becomes the central practice of Pure Land devotion.
At death he descends with bodhisattvas to escort the faithful to Sukhāvatī, a scene painted and meditated upon across East Asia.
Stories of Amitābha
Amitābha's mythology is the story of a vow. Long ago, as the monk Dharmākara, he stood before the Buddha Lokeśvararāja and promised to create a Buddha-field so perfect that any being who trusted in him would be reborn there and swiftly attain enlightenment.
The Larger Sukhāvatī-vyūha Sūtra describes how the monk Dharmākara, after five aeons of contemplation, formulated forty-eight vows. The eighteenth vow became the foundation of Pure Land practice: any being, even one who had committed the five grave crimes, if they trusted in him and recited his name even ten times, would be reborn in Sukhāvatī. Having made the vows, Dharmākara fulfilled them and became the Buddha Amitābha, whose Pure Land now welcomes beings from every direction.
The Amitāyurdhyāna Sūtra was addressed to Queen Vaidehī, imprisoned by her cruel son Ajātaśatru. In her despair she asked the Buddha to show her a land without sorrow. The Buddha taught her sixteen meditations, culminating in a vision of Amitābha and his Pure Land. The sutra insists that even the worst sinner, if they sincerely call Amitābha's name at the moment of death, will be received by him.
The Saddharma-puṇḍarīka Sūtra (Lotus Sūtra) places Amitābha within the vast cosmos of Buddhas and bodhisattvas. He is not merely a savior for one world but one manifestation of the universal Buddha-nature. The bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara, who descends from Sukhāvatī to save beings, extends Amitābha's compassion into every corner of suffering.
Amitābha is the Buddha who lowered the ladder. Where other paths ask the practitioner to climb by effort, he promised to reach down and lift up anyone who called his name. This is not weakness but a radical confidence in the power of compassion.
Enter Extended Lore