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THE CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF INDIA - I - ANCIENT INDIA
V
THE PERIOD OF THE LATER SAMHITAS, THE BRAHMANAS,
THE ARANYAKAS, AND THE UPANISHADS
DEFINITELY later than that depicted in the Rigveda is the civilisation
presented by the later Samhitas, the Brahmanas, the Iiranyakas, and the
Upanishads. It is on the whole probable that the total time embraced in this
period is not longer, perhaps it is even shorter, than that covered by the
earlier and later strata of the Rigveda; and there are hymns in the tenth book
of the Rigveda which are really contemporaneous with the later Samhitas, just
as those Samhitas have here and there preserved work of a much earlier epoch.
But the distinction between the main body of the Rigveda and the rest of the
Vedic literature is clear and undeniable. Nor is it open to much doubt that the
redaction of the Samhita of the Rigveda into what, in substance as opposed to
verbal form, was its present shape took place before the other Samhitas were
compiled. Of these Samhitas the Samaveda, the collection of chants for the
Saman singers, is so dependent on the Rigveda for its contents, that it is
negligible for purposes of history. On the other hand, the Samhitas of the
Yajurveda, the collection of the formulae and prayers of the Adhvaryu priest,
to whose lot fell the actual performance of the sacrificial acts, are of the
highest historical importance. They represent two main schools, the Black and
the White, the name of the latter being due, according to tradition, to the
fact that, whereas the texts of the Black Yajurveda contain verse or prose
formulae and the prose explanations and comments combined into one whole, the
text of the latter distinguishes between the verse and prose formulae which it
collects in the Samhita, and the prose explanations which it includes in a
Brahmana. Of the Black Yajurveda three complete texts exist, those of the
Taittiriya, the Kathaka, and the Maitrayani schools, while considerable
fragments of a Kapishthala Samhita closely allied to the Kathaka also exist.
In the case of the Taittiriya there is a Brahmana which is a
supplementary work, dealing with matter not taken up in the Samhita. The White
school has the Vajasaneyi Samhita and the Chatapatha Brahmana, the latter being
one of the most important works in the whole Vedic literature. Finally, there
is the Samhita of the Atharvaveda, which is technically reckoned as
appertaining to the Brahman, the priest who in the later state of the ritual
superintends the whole of the sacrifice, and which is a curious repository of
most mingled matter, for the most part spells of every kind, but containing
also theosophical hymns of considerable importance.
The conjunction of the prose explanation with the formulae does not
prove the later composition of both the prose and the formulae, and there is no
ground for attributing the two strata to the same date. On the other hand, the
prose of the Yajurveda Samhitas is amongst the earliest Vedic prose. Possibly
somewhat earlier may be that of the Panchavimcha Brahmana, which is the
Brahmana of the Samaveda, and which, despite the extraordinary technicality of
its details, is yet not without importance for the history of the civilization
of the period. The Brahmanas of the Rigveda are probably slightly later in
date, the older being unquestionably the earlier part (books I—V) of the
Aitareya, and the younger the Kaushitaki or Chankhayanal. When the Atharvaveda,
which long was not recognised as fully entitled to claim rank as a Veda
proper, came within the circle of the Vedas, it was considered desirable to
provide it with a Brahmana, the Gopatha, but this strange work is in part a
cento from other texts, including the Chatapatha Brahmana, and appears to be
later than the Kaucika and Vaitana Sutras attached to the Atharvaveda,its
value then for this period is negligible.
Special portions from the Brahmanas are given the title of Aranyaka,
"forest books", apparently because their contents were so secret that they had
to be studied in the depths of the forests, away from possibility of
overhearing by others than students. The extant texts which bear this name are
the Aitareya, the Kaushitaki, and the Taittiriya, which are appendages to the
Brahmanas bearing those names. All three are somewhat heterogeneous in
composition, the Aitareya being the most definitely theosophical, while the
Taittiriya is the least. Still more important are the Upanishads, so called
because they were imparted to pupils in secret session, the term denoting the
sitting of the pupil before the teacher. Each of the three Aranyakas contains
an Upanishad of corresponding name. More valuable however are the two great
Upanishads, the Brihaddranyaka, which is attached to the Chatapatha Brahmana,
forming part of its fourteenth and last book in one recension and the
seventeenth book in the other, and the Chhandogya Upanishad attached to the Samaveda; these two are in all probability the oldest of the Upanishads. To the
Samaveda also belongs the Jaiminiya Brahmana, one book of which, the Jaiminiya
Upanishad Brahmana, is really an Aranyaka, and, like other Aranyakas, contains
in itself an Upanishad, the brief but interesting Kena Upanishad. The number of
treatises styled Upanishad is very large; but, with the possible exception of
the Kathaka, which expands a legend found in the Taittiriya Brahmana dealing
with the nature of the soul, none of them other than those enumerated can claim
to be older than Buddhism; and the facts which they contain cannot therefore
prudently be used in sketching the life of the period under review. Similarly,
the Sutras, which are text-books either giving in the form of very brief
rules directions for the performance of the sacrifice in its various forms (the
Chrauta Sutras dealing with the great rites at which a number of priests were
employed, the Grihya Sutras with the domestic sacrifices and other duties performed
by the householder), or enunciating customary law and practice (the Dharma
Sutras), cannot safely be relied upon as presenting a picture of this period.
They are however of much indirect value; for they throw light upon practices
which are alluded to in the Brahmanas in terms capable of more than one
interpretation; and here and there they preserve verses, far older than the
works themselves, which contain historic facts of value.
We have seen that, in the period of the Rigveda, the centre of the
civilization was tending to be localized in the land between the Sarasvati and
the Drishadvati, but that, though this was the home of the Bharatas, other
tribes including the famous five tribes dwelt in the Punjab, which had in all
probability been the earlier home of the Indians. In the Brahmana period, as
the period under review may conveniently be called, the localization of
civilization in the more eastern country is definitely achieved, and the centre
of the life of the day is Kurukshetra, bounded by Khandava on the south,
Turghna on the north, Parinah on the west. In contrast with the frequent
mention of the eastern lands the Punjab recedes in importance; and its later
name, Panchanada, "land of the five streams", is not found until the epic period.
The tribes of the west receive disapproval both in the Chatapatha and the
Aitareya Brahmanas. In the Aitareya Brahmana a geographical passage ascribes
to the Middle Country, the later Madhyadecha, the Kurus and Panchalas with the
Vachas and the Uchinaras, to the south the Satvants, and to the north beyond the
Himalaya the Uttara-Kurus and the Uttara-Madras. On the other hand, while the
west recedes in importance the regions east of the KuruPanchala country come
into prominence, especially Kosala, corresponding roughly to the modern Oudh,
Videha, the modern Tirhut or N. Bihar, and Magadha, the modern S. Bihar. Still
further east was the country of the Angas, the modern E. Bihar. In the south we
hear of outcast tribes in the Aitareya Brahmana, probably tribes who were not
fully Brahmanised: their names are given as the Andhras, who appear as a great
kingdom in the centuries immediately before and after the Christian era,
Pundras,
Mutibas, Pulindas, and Cabaras, the last named being now a tribe living on the
Madras frontier near Orissa and showing, in its language, traces of its Munda
origin. In the south also was Naishadha.
It does not seem likely that Aryan civilisation had yet overstepped the
Vindhya, which is not mentioned by name in the Vedic texts, though the
Kaushitaki Upanishad refers to the northern and southern mountains, the latter
of which must be the Vindhya. At the same time geographical knowledge of the
north is wider : the Atharvaveda knows not only of the Mujavants and the
Gandharis, but also of the Mahavrishas, and the name of a place in the
Mahavrisha country, Raikvaparna, is preserved in the Chhandogya Upanishad.
Yaska in the Nirukta, a text of about 500 BC explaining with illustrations
certain selected Vedic words, tells us that the speech of the Kambojas differed
in certain respects from the ordinary Indian speech, referring doubtless to the
tribes living north-west of the Indus who bore that name. Vidarbha, the modern
Berdr, is mentioned, but only in the late Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana, though
a Bhima of Vidarbha occurs in a late passage of the Aitareya.
In addition to a wider geographical outlook, the Brahmana period is
marked by the knowledge of towns and definite localities. There are fairly
clear references to Asandivant, the Kuru capital, Kampila, the capital of
Panchala in Madhyadecha, to Kauchambi, and to Kachi, the capital of the Kachis
on the river Varanavati, whence in later times Benares derives its name. So we
hear in this period for the first time of the Vinachana, the place of the
disappearance of the Sarasvati in the desert, and Plaksha Prasravana the place
forty-four days' journey distant, where the river reappears and which, in the
version of the Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmaua, is but a span from the centre of
the universe. These are clear signs both of more developed city life and of
more settled habits.
Corresponding with the change in geographical conditions is a still
greater change in the grouping of the tribes. The Bharatas, who are the heroes
of the third and the seventh books of the Rigveda, no longer occupy the main
position, and we find in their place, in the land which we know they once held,
the Kurus, and close to the Kurus the allied Panchalas. As we have seen
already, there is little doubt that the Kurus were new comers with whom the
Bharatas amalgamated, and the Kurus thus reinforced included in their numbers
the Purus. The mention of the Uttara-Kurus as resident beyond the Himalaya is
sufficiently accounted for if we suppose that a branch of this tribe had
settled in Kashmir, just as another branch seems to have settled on the Indus
and the Chenab. The Panchalas, too, seem to have been a composite tribe, as
the name which is clearly derived from pañcha, "five", shows. According to the
Chatapatha Brahmapa the older name for the Panchalas was Krivi; and we may at
least believe that the Krivis who with the Kurus appear to have constituted the
two Vaikarna tribes of the Rigveda were a part of the Panchala nation. The
same Brahmana suggests, if it does not prove, that the Turvachas were another
element of the people; and the disappearance from history at this period of the
Anus and Druhyus may indicate that they also were merged in the new
confederation. With the Kurus and Panchalas must be ranked the Vachas and
Uchinaras, two minor tribes who occupied the Middle Country, and the Srinjayas,
whose close connection with the Kurus is proved beyond doubt by the fact that at
one time they had a Purohita, in common, showing that, for the time at least,
they must have been acting under the leadership of one king.
In the texts the Kuru-Panchalas pass as the models of good form: the
sacrifices are perfectly performed in their country: speech is best spoken
there and, as it seems, among the northern Kurus; and the Kaushitaki
Brahmana tells of people going to the north for the sake of its pure speech.
The Kuru-Panchala kings are the example for other kings: they perform the
Rajasuya, the sacrifice of the royal consecration: they march forth in the
dewy season for their raids and return in the hot season. Their Brahmans are
famous in the literature of the Upanishads for their knowledge; and the
Samhitas and Brahmanas which are preserved seem, without exception, to have
taken definite form among the KuruPanchalas, even when, as in the case of the
Chatapatha Bramana, they recognize the existence of the activities of the kings
and priests of Kosala-Videha. It is significant of the state of affairs that in
the Samhitas and allied texts of the Yajurvedas where the ceremony of the
Wajasilya is described, the king is presented to the people with the
declaration, This is your king, 0 Kurus,' with variants of ' 0 Panchalas ' and
0 Kuru-Panchalas.'
In the Sanskrit epic the Kurus and the Panchalas are conceived as being
at enmity; and it is natural to enquire whether this tradition goes back to
the Vedic periods. The reply, however, must be in the negative, for the
evidence adduced in favour of the theory is of the weakest possible character.
In the Kathaka Samhita there is an obscure ritual dispute between a certain
priest, Vaka, son of Dalbha, who is believed to have been a Panchala, and
Dhritarashtra Vaicitravirya, who is assumed to have been a Kuru king. But
apart from the fact that a mere dispute on a point of ritual between a
Panchala priest and a Kuru king could not prove any hostility between the two
peoples, there is no ground for supposing that this Dhritarashtra was any one
else than the king of the Kachis who bears the same name and who was defeated by
the Bharata prince, Satrajita Chatanika, and in the very same passage of the
Kathaka allusion is made to the union of the KuruPanchalas. A second argument
of some human interest is derived from the clever suggestion of Weber that in
the revolting ceremony of the horse-sacrifice, one of the great kingly
sacrifices by which the Indian king proclaimed his claim to imperial sway, the
queen of the Kurus is compelled to lie beside the victim, since otherwise
Subhadrika, the wife of the king of Kampila, the capital of Panchala, would
take her place. If this were the case there would be convincing proof of an ancient
rivalry which might well end in the bitter conflicts of the epic; but,
unhappily, the interpretation is almost certainly incorrect. With the absence
of evidence of opposition between the Kurus, assumed to have been specially
Bramanical, and the Panchalas, disappears any support for the theory, based
on the phenomena of the later distribution of dialects in India, that the Kurus
were a fresh stream of immigrants into India who came via Chitral and Gilgit
and forced themselves as a wedge between the Aryan tribes already dwelling in
the land. The theory proceeds to assume that, coming with few or no women, they
intermingled with the Dravidian population with great completeness and produced
the Aryo-Dravidian physical type. If these things were so, the fact was not at
any rate known by the age which produced the Samhitas and the Brahmanas.
Though the Bharatas disappear in this period as a tribe, the fame of the
Bharata kings had not been lost: in a passage in the Chatapatha Brahmana which
describes the famous men who sacrificed with the horse-sacrifice, we hear of
the Bharata Dauhshanti, whom the nymph Chakuntala bore at Nadapit, and who
defeated the king of the Satvants and won victories on the Ganges and Jumna,
showing that the Bharatas, as in the Rigveda, were performing their great deeds
on the eastern as well as on the western side of the kingdom. Another king,
Satrajita Chatanika, as we have seen, defeated the king of the Kachis. We
hear too of a descendant of Divodasa, Pratardana, whose name is of value as
tending to show that the Tritsus were the family of the royal house of the
Bharatas: according to the Kaushitaki Upanishad he met his death in battle. It
is possible that with him perished the direct Tritsu line: at any rate, the
first king who bears the Kuru name, Kuruchravana, is a descendant of Trasadasyu,
the greatest of the Puru kings. But of Kuruchravana and of his father
Mitratithi, and his son Upamachravas we know practically nothing; and the
first great Kuru king is one mentioned in the Atharvaveda, Parikshit, in whose
reign the hymn tells us the kingdom of the Kurus flourished exceedingly. His
grandson and great-grandson according to tradition were the Pratisutvana and
Pratipa whose names are mentioned in the Atharvaveda. A later descendant of his
was the famous Janamejaya, whose horse-sacrifice is celebrated in the Chatapatha
Brahmana, and who had in his entourage the priests Indrota Daivapi Chaunaka
and Tura Kavasheya. His brothers Ugrasena, Bhimasena, and Chrutasena by the
same sacrifice purified themselves of the crime of Brahman-slaying. But the
history of the Kurus was not apparently, at the end of the period, unchequered: there is an obscure reference to their being saved by a mare, perhaps a
reference to the prowess of their charioteers or cavalry in battle; but the
same text, the Chhandogya Upanishad, alludes to a hailstorm or perhaps a shower
of locusts afflicting them, and a prediction is preserved in an old Sutra
telling that they would be driven from Kurukshetra. It is in accord with these
hints that the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad sets as a question for discussion the
problem what has become of the descendants of Parikshit: the dynasty must have
passed away in some great disaster. From the Chatapatha Brahmana we gather that
the capital Janamejaya was Asandivant, "the city of the throne", and that at
Mashnara a Kuru king won a victory, and Tura Kavasheya, a priest of the
Bharatas, sacrificed at Karoti.
Of the Panchalas apart from the Kurus we hear comparatively little:
they had however kings like Kraivya and Chona Satrasaha, father of Koka, who
performed the horse-sacrifice and thus claimed imperial power, Durmukha, who
was taught the royal consecration by Brihaduktha and conquered the whole earth,
and the more real Pravahana Jaivali who appears as philosopher king in the
Upanishads, and who at least must have been willing to take part in the
disputes of the Brahmans at his court. Panchala towns were Kampila, Kauchambi,
and Parivakra or Paricakra, the scene of Kraivya's exploits.
The Uttara-Kurus seem already in the time of the Aitareya Brahmana to
have won a somewhat mythical reputation, for when Atyarati Janamtapi, who was
not a king, proposed to conquer them as well as the rest of the world, he was
dissuaded by his priest Vasishtha Satyahavya, and for his rashness was defeated
by Amitratapana Chushmina, the king of the Chibis, a tribe no doubt identical
with the Chivas of the Rigveda and belonging to the north-west. The
Uttara-Madras must have lived near them in Kashmir; and the Madras of whom we
hear in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad were, in the Buddhist epoch, settled
between the Chenab and the Ravi. In the Middle Country with the Kuru-Panchalas
were the Vachas and Uchinaras who seem to have been of no importance. With them
in the Kaushitaki Upanishad are coupled the Matsyas, and we hear of one great
Matsya king, Dhvasan Dvaitavana, who performed the horse-sacrifice and who
probably ruled in or about Jaipur or Alwar, where lake Dvaitavana must be
placed. On the Jumna we hear at the end of the period of the Salvas, under king
Yaugandhari, probably in close touch with the Kuru-Pahchala people.
The Srinjayas also stood in this period in close relationship to the
Kurus, and like the Kurus the Srinjayas seem to have suffered disaster at some
period. The Vaitahavyas, the Atharvaveda relates, offended the priestly family
of the Bhrigus and came to ruin: this tradition is confirmed by the notices of
disasters in the Kathaka and Taittiriya Samhitas. Of their history we have one definite
glimpse: they rose against their king, Dushtaritu Paumsayana, despite the ten
generations of his royal descent, and expelled him with his Sthapati,
"minister", Chakra Revottaras Patava; but the latter afterwards succeeded in
restoring his master to power, despite the opposition of Balhika Pratipiya, whose
patronymic reminds us of the Pratipa who was a descendant of the Kuru king
Parikshit, showing that the Kuru princes were probably anxious enough to use
domestic strife as a means of securing a hold over a neighbouring kingdom.
Perhaps in the long run the ruin of the Vaitahavyas took the shape of
absorption in the Kuru realm. On the other hand, the defeats of the Satvants on
the south by the Kurus were doubtless nothing more than mere raids.
Further east of the Kuru-Panchala realm lay the territories of Kosala
and Videha, which were, however, not allied in any so close a manner as the
Kurus and the Panchalas. Para, son of Atnara, their greatest king who
celebrated the horse-sacrifice, is however spoken of as a king of Videha as
well as a king of Kosala, showing that the kingdoms were sometimes united under
one sovereign. A well-known legend in the Chatapatha Brahmana recognises that
Videha received Vedic civilization later than Kosala, for it tells how Mathava
the Videgha, whose name shows the older form of the word Videha, passed from
the Sarasvati, the seat of Vedic culture, to the land of Videha, crossing the
Sadanira; this perennial stream, as its name denotes, formed the boundary of
Kosala on the east and, with some plausibility, has been identified with the
modern Gandak, which rising in Nepal joins the Ganges near Patna. Kati and
Videha are also connected in the Kaushitaki Upanishad; and a late text
preserves the record that Jala Jatukarnya was the Purohita of the Kosalas,
Videhas, and Kachis at one time, proving a temporary league. Of other kings we
hear of the Kosalan Hiranyanabha, of the Videban Nami Sapya, and beyond all of
Janaka of Videha, whose fame leads him to play the part of the father of Sita,
the heroine of the Ramayana, the second of India's great epics. Janaka appears
himself as a king ever anxious to seek for the wisdom of the Brahmans; and
among his contemporaries are mentioned the great Yajnavalkya, and Chvetaketu.
His contemporary was Ajatachatru of Kati, whom one account indeed refers to as
of Kati or Videha, and it is a natural suggestion that in this name we have a
chronological fact of value. It is suggested that in this Ajatachatru we have
the Ajatasattu of the Buddhist texts, who was a contemporary of the Buddha and
who therefore reigned in the sixth century BC. But the suggestion is not a
happy one. In the Buddhist text Ajatasattu never appears as king of any other
place than Magadha, and the name is merely an epithet, "he who has no foe",
which could be applied to any king, though it may well be that the Ajatasattu
of Magadha gladly borrowed an epithet which a king of Kachi had made famous.
Other kings of Kachi were Dhritarashtra, whose defeat by a Bharata has been
mentioned above, and Bhadrasena, a descendant of Ajatachatru.
The Eastern
Peoples
It is very noticeable that the relations of Kachi and the Bharatas seem
to have been those of war; and there is evidence of some aversion existing
between the Kosala-Videhas and the Kachis on the one hand and the Kuru-Panchalas
on the other. It is clear enough that the Brahmanical tradition came to the
Kosala-Videhas from the Kuru-Panchala country; but the question remains
whether the Aryan tribes, who occupied Oudh and Tirhut, were a branch of the
Kuru-Panchalas or men who were originally settled in the Kuru-Parichala
country or on its borders and were pushed eastwards by the pressure of the
Kuru-Panchalas. The evidence is not sufficient to pronounce any opinion on
either view, and, as we have seen, still less to show that the Kurus were
distinct from the Panchalas as a different branch of the Aryan invaders of
India.
Much more definitely still beyond the pale were the people of Magadha,
which serves with Anga, in the Atharvaveda as a symbol of a distant land. The
man of Magadha is dedicated, in the account of the symbolic human sacrifice
given in the Yajurveda, to "loud noise", suggesting that the Magadha country
must have been the seat of minstrelsy, an idea supported by the fact that in
later literature a man of Magadha is the designation of a minstrel. If, as has
been suggested, the Kikatas of the Rigveda were really located in Magadha, the
dislike of the country goes back to the Rigveda itself. The cause must probably
have been the imperfect Brahmanization of the land and the predominance of
aboriginal blood, which later in history rendered Magadha the headquarters of
Buddhism. It is significant that the Buddhist texts show a subordination of the
Brahman to the Kshatriya class which has no parallel in the orthodox literature.
It is clear however that Brahmans sometimes lived there, but that their doing
so was a ground for surprise.
The man of Magadha is brought into close connection with the Vratya in a
mystical hymn in the Atharvaveda which celebrates the Vratya as a type of the
supreme power in the universe. A more connected account of the Vratyas is found
in the Panchavincha Brahmana of the Samaveda and the Sutras of that Veda. It
is clear that, as their name suggests, they were persons regarded as outcasts;
and ceremonies are described intended to secure them admission into the
Brahmanical fold. The description of the Vratyas well suits nomad tribes: they
are declared not to practise agriculture, to go about in rough wagons, to wear
turbans, to carry goads and a peculiar kind of bow, while their garments are
of a special kind. Their sense of justice was not that of the Brahmans, and
their speech, though it seems Aryan, was apparently Prakritic in form, as is
suggested by the significant remark that they called what was easy of utterance
hard to speak; for the Prakrits differ from Sanskrit essentially in their
efforts to avoid harsh consonantal combinations. Where they were located is not
certain, for their habits would agree well enough with nomads in the west; but
the little information which we have seems fairly enough to lead to the
conclusion that some at least of the Vratyas were considered to be dwellers in
Magadha.
There is little to be said of other tribes. The Vidarbhas are known
through one of their kings who received certain knowledge from the mythical
sages Parvata and Narada, and through a special kind of dog found in their
country. The list of kings who performed the horse-sacrifice includes the
Chvikna king, Rishabha Yajnatura. Mention has been made above of the
Paravatas, who were found on the Jumna; and the Kekayas with their prince
Achvapati, and the Balhikas were located in the far north. The temptation to
transform the name of the latter into a sign of Iranian influence must be
withstood, as it rests on no sure basis and we have seen Balhika as part of the
name of a Kuru prince. An early Sutra refers to Chaphala, the kingdom of
Rituparna. The Andhras, and other tribes mentioned by the Aitareya Brahmana as
outcasts, were probably still Dravidian in blood and speech, though Munda
speaking tribes may have been mingled with them as the name Cabara suggests. The
Angas, too, may have been comparatively little affected by the influence of
the Aryan culture. It has been conjectured that in Magadha the wave of Aryan
civilization met with another wave of invasion from the east; but, tempting as
the suggestion is, it cannot be supported by anything in the Vedic literature.
As was to be expected, society was far from unchanged in this period of
active Aryan expansion. As we have seen, there is good reason to believe that
in the period of the Rigveda the priesthood and the nobility were hereditary.
This view receives support from the fact that similar class distinctions are to
be found in other Indo-European communities, such as the patrician gentes in
Rome, the Eupatridae of Athens, the nobles of early Germany, the eorls of the
Anglo-Saxons, and the still closer parallel of the Iranian classes of Athravas
and Rathaesthas, priests and warriors. It may even be that these
distinctions are earlier than the severance of the Indo-Iranians, if not as old
as the union of the Aryan peoples. But in this period there comes into
existence a new factor, the introduction of divisions among the ordinary
freemen, the Vaicyas, and the development of a large and complicated system of
caste which converts the simple distinction of Vaigya and Chudra into an
ever-increasing number of endogamous hereditary groups practising one
occupation or at least restricted to a small number of occupations. This result
was certainly far from being reached in the period of the Brahmanas, but the
tendency of social or racial distinctions to harden into castes is already apparent.
In this development there must have been two main influences: the force. of
occupation is later revealed clearly enough in the Pali texts, and another
interesting case is supplied by the Brahmanas themselves. In the Taittiriya
Bramana the Rathakaras, "chariot makers", appear as a special class along with
the Vaichyas; and in this special position we can see how the chariot makers,
the type of skilled workers in the Rigveda, have, through their devotion to a
mechanical art, lost status as compared with the ordinary freeman. The
influence of the aborigines must also have been very strong, as intermarriage
proceeded. To be born of a female Chudra was a disgrace with which Kavasha and
Vatsa were taunted by their priestly contemporaries: contact with the
aborigines seems to have raised questions of purity of blood very like those
which at present agitate the Southern States of the United States or the white
people in South Africa. In the Rigveda, restrictions on intermarriage seem to
have been of the simplest kind, confined to rules such as those prohibiting
marriage of brother and sister or father and daughter. In the Sutras the rules
are still not quite rigid; but they insist that there shall be no marriage with
agnates or cognates, and they require that a man must either marry in his own
caste, or if he marries out of his caste, it must be into a lower caste. But
while some authorities so lay down this rule as to allow the Brahman to marry
into the next two lower castes, the Kshatriya and the Vaichya, and the Kshatriya
to marry into the Vaichya caste, others also permit marriage with Chudras, and
therefore allow a Vaichya to marry into that caste.
As might be expected, the Brahmana period presents us with a stage
intermediate between the rules of the Sutras and the laxity of the Rigveda. The
rule as to marriage within the circle of the cognates and agnates seems, by the
time of the Chatapatha Brahmana, to have extended only to the prohibition of
marriage with relations of the third or, according to others, of the fourth
degree. Similarly in the Brahmanas, while we have no reason to doubt that
priesthood and nobility were hereditary, these castes seem to have been free
to intermarry with the lower castes including the Chudra; as the cases of Vatsa
and Kavasha cited above indicate. The marriage of a Brahman with the daughter
of a king is attested by the case of Sukanya, the daughter of Charyata, who
married the seer Chyavana.
The question how far change of caste was possible raises difficult
problems. The evidence of any change is scanty in the extreme. The most that
can be said is that it does not seem to have been impossible. Thus in the
Rigveda, as we have seen, Vichvamitra is a priest, the Purohita of the king
Sudas, but in the Panchavimcha and the Aitareya Brahmanas he is treated as of
royal descent, of the family of the Jahnus. The Panchavimcha Brahmana also
speaks of certain persons as royal seers; and the later tradition preserved
in the Anukramani, or "index" to the composers of the Rigveda, ascribes hymns
to such royal seers, in some cases at least without any real foundation.
Yaska, in one instance, represents a prince, Devapi, as sacrificing for his
brother Chamtanu, the king; but here we can see from the passage of the Rigveda
on which his narrative is based that he has no warrant for this theory. In the
Aitareya Brahmana a king, Vichvantara, sacrifices without his priests, the
Chyaparnas; but the case has no cogency, for the mention of other priests in
the context suggests the natural inference that he used one or other of these
groups. Some kings are mentioned in the Panchavimcha Brahmana and elsewhere
as having been great sacrificers; but this may mean no more than that they
were the patrons of the sacrifice, the normal part of the king. We come nearer
to contact with fact in the concurrent stories of the Upanishads which show
kings like Janaka of Videha, Achvapati king of the Kekayas in the Punjab,
Ajatacatru of Kachi, and Pravahana Jaivali of Panchala disputing with and
instructing Brahmans in the lore of the brahman, the unity which is the reality
of the world. Very possibly this attribution is mainly due to considerations of
the advantage of conciliating the kings who were the patrons of the new
philosophy; but, in any case, there is no reason to deny that kings could and
did take interest in intellectual movements, and we cannot from such facts
infer that there was any possibility of interchange of caste: we cannot say
that, if a king became a seer, as the Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana asserts in one
case, it really meant that he was regarded as ceasing to belong to the kingly
caste, any more than we can say that, if a priest became king, as was not
unknown later at least, he thereby suffered any loss of his priestly position.
One case of interest remains, that of Satyakama Jabala who was accepted as a
pupil by a distinguished priest because he showed promise, although all he
could tell of his ancestry was that he was the son of a slave girl; but,
evidently, his father might have been a Brahman, and the case is only of value
as negativing the idea of any unnatural rigidity of institutions in the Vedic
age. The history of later India shows how rigid distinctions might be in theory
but how ingeniously they might in practice be evaded in the individual case.
What is more significant, perhaps, is that there is no instance recorded in the
Vedic texts of a Vaisya rising to the rank of priest or a prince: the two
upper hereditary classes might to some degree permit closer relations, but
they seem to have regarded the commoner as definitely beneath them.
The relations of the four great classes of castes are summed up from the
point of view of the Braman in a passage of the Aitareya Bramana. In that
passage the Kshatriya is taken as the norm, and the other castes are defined
according to the relations which they bear to him.
The Braman is a receiver of gifts, a drinker of the Soma, a seeker of
food, and liable to removal at will. We can distinguish in this period two
classes of Brahmans, the priests who, as Purohitas of the king or belonging to
his entourage, took part in the vast sacrifices, some of them lasting for at
least a year, which they offered for their masters, and the priests of the
village who lived a humble and more restricted existence, except when they
might be called on to serve at the sacrifice instituted by some rich noble or
merchant. In both cases the priest was, in the long run, at the mercy of the
political power of the king. To the spiritual claims of the Brahmans, so
proudly asserted at the ceremony of the royal consecration, when the king is
announced to the people as their king but it is added that the Soma is the king
of the Brahmans, must be opposed the practical power of the king.
The Vaiga is described as tributary to another, to be lived on by
another, and to be oppressed at will. From the point of view of the Kshatriya
this indicates the fact that the exactions of the king from the commoners of the
tribe were limited only by practical considerations of expediency: the
commoner had no legal right to his landholding or to his private property if
the king decided to take them from him; and, if he was allowed to retain them,
he paid for them in tribute and in the duty of supporting others. This refers,
no doubt, to the king's privilege of assigning to his nobles the right to
receive food from the common people, and thus of making provision for the
maintenance of the nobility, who assisted him in the protection of the country,
and in the administration and the conduct of justice. By this means the nobles
came more and more to occupy the position of landholders under the king, while
the Vaichyas approximated to the position of tenants. Moreover, the nobles may
well have received from the king, as a result of successful onslaughts on the
aborigines, grants of conquered lands and slaves, which they would hold in full
proprietorship, subject to the political authority of the king. Among the
Vaichyas, again, distinctions were growing up: that originally the agriculture
was carried on by Aryan tillers is certain; but, in the period of the
Brahmanas, the position was changing gradually; and, for the peasant working
on his own fields, was being substituted the landowner cultivating his estate
by means of slaves, or the merchant carrying on his trade by the same
instrumentality, though we cannot with any certainty say how far this process
was proceeding. The industrial workers, like the chariot makers, the smiths,
the tanners, the carpenters, were sinking in estimation and forming distinct
castes of their own.
On the other hand, the Chudra was approximating more and more to the
position to which the humbler freeman was being reduced. In the passage
referred to, he is still described as "the servant of another, to be expelled
at will and to be slain at will"; but in the Sutras we find that, while the
Vaichya has a wergeld of 100 cows, the Chudra has a wergeld of 10 cows; and, even
if we assume that this is merely for the benefit of his master—which is very
doubtful—still unquestionably the growing complication of the social scheme was
abolishing the relation of simple slavery. Slaves proper there were, as we see
in the Buddhist texts; but, where whole tribes were reduced to subjection, the
tendency must have been to assign villages and their inhabitants to the king
and to the nobles, sometimes, perhaps, also, though in a less degree, to the
commoners who at this period must still have formed the bulk of the army. While
some of the aboriginal inhabitants would thus become slaves pure and simple,
the rest would rather stand in the relationship of serfs; and, as we have seen,
there is reason to suppose that in many cases the true Vaichyas also were
approximating to the position of tenants of the nobles. There is an
interesting parallel in the early history of England, where the ordinary
freeman gradually fell into feudal dependence on his superiors, while the slave
as gradually acquired the position of a serf, and became more and more
assimilated to the position to which the freeman had sunk.
This ambiguous position of the Chudra is amply recognised in the Vedic
texts: on the one hand, he is emphatically regarded as being impure and not
fit to take part in the sacrifice: after consecration, in some cases, the mere
speaking to a Chudra is absolutely forbidden. He was not allowed even to milk
the cow for the milk needed for the offering to Agni. In the Vajasaneyi Samhita
illicit connections between Aryan and Chudra are severely reprobated; but, in
other places, sin against Arya and Chudra is referred to, prayers are uttered
for the glory of Arya and Chudra, and we learn of rich Chudras. The Sutras, while
they emphasise many points not attested by the Brahmana texts, such as the
danger of sitting near Chudras, their exclusion from the study of the Veda, and
the prohibition of eating food touched by them, yet recognize that they may be
merchants or indeed exercise any trade.
It seems probable enough that among the chudras themselves there were
rules of endogamy; for we may generally assume, in the absence of anything to
the contrary in the texts, that the Vedic Indians and the aborigines alike
married within the tribe. The Chudras seem often to have been subjugated by
whole tribes, such as the Baindas, the Parnakas, the Paulkasas, and perhaps the
Chandalas, who may originally have been members of small and degraded tribes
living mainly by fishing or hunting: such tribes have survived in the Central
Provinces and near the Himalayas until the present day, and they must have been
much more numerous in the first millennium BC. Thus from below as well as from
above, from the practices of the conquered aborigines as well as from the class
prejudices of the Aryans, may have come the impulse to the development of
caste.
From the political point of view the chief characteristic of the new
order was the growth in the power of the king. We must not assume that, even in
this period, there were great kingdoms. It is true that the horse-sacrifice as
reported in the Chatapatha Brahmana and in the royal consecration of the
Aitareya Brahmana, both of which passages are late, presuppose that the kings
who performed it set up claims to imperial dignity, and that they had won the
proud title of "conquerors of the whole earth", which is applied to them. But
real conquest seems not to have been meant; and, though the evidence above
given proves that there was considerable amalgamation of tribes and the
formation of larger kingdoms than those in the period of the Rigveda, yet it is
significant that even the Kuru-Panchalas, and still less the KosalaVidehas,
never amalgamated into single kingdoms. We may, however, safely hold that the
king now ruled in many cases a much larger realm than the princes of the
Rigveda. The hereditary character of the monarchy is clearly apparent: in one
case, that of the Srinjayas, we hear expressly of a monarchy which had lasted
ten generations. The term Rajaputra, "son of a king", is now found together
with the older Rajanya, which probably covers the nobles as well as the king
and his family. The importance of the kingly rank is emphasised by the
elaborate rite of the royal consecration, the Rajasuya. The king is clad in the
ceremonial garments of his rank, is formally anointed by the priest, steps on
a tiger skin to attain the power of the tiger, takes part in a mimic cattle
raid, assumes the bow and arrow, and steps as a conqueror to each of the four
quarters, an action paralleled in the coronation of the Hungarian king. A game
of dice is played in which he is made the victor. A list of kings who were thus
consecrated is given in the Aitareya Brahmana: in all but details it
coincides with the list given in the Chatapatha Brahmana of those who performed
the horse-sacrifice.
At the royal consecration the entourage of the king played an important
part. The list of Ratnins, "jewels", given by the Taittiriya texts, consists of
the Brahman, i.e. the Purohita, the Rajanya, the Mahishi, the first wife of the
four allowed to the king by custom, the Vavatda, "favourite wife", the
Parivrikti, "discarded wife", the Suta, "charioteer", the Senani, "commander of
the army", the Gramani, "village headman", the Kshattri, "chamberlain", the
Samgrahitri, "charioteer" or "treasurer", the Bhagadugha, "collector of
taxes" or "divider of food", and the Akshavspa, "superintendent of dicing" or
"thrower of dice". The Chatapatha Brahmana has also the "huntsman" and the
"courier", while the Maitrayani Samhita, adds the Takshan, "carpenter", and
Rathakara, "chariot-maker"' In an older list of eight Viras, heroes, given in
the Panchavimcha Brahmava are found the brother, son, Purohita, Mahishi, Seta,
Gramani, Kshattri, and Samgrahitri. We are faced, in the interpretation of the
names of several of these officers, with the doubt whether we are to recognise
in them merely courtiers or public functionaries. The Suta is according to
native tradition the "charioteer"; but it seems much more probable that he
was at once a herald and a minstrel, and to this conclusion the inviolability,
which in one passage is attributed to him, clearly points. The Gramani has
already been met with as a military official in the period of the Rigveda.
Probably at this epoch a Gramani was, both for civil and military purposes, at
the head of each village, owing, it may be conjectured, his position to the
king, while the Gramani par excellence presided over the city or village where
the royal court was situated. It is also far from unlikely, despite the silence
of the texts, that the civil functions of the Gramani were the more important;
for the post is emphatically declared in several places to represent the summit
of the ambition of the Vaichya. If later analogy is to help us, we may
conjecture that the Gramani formed the channel through which the royal control
was exercised and the royal dues received. It may well be then that the
household officers, besides their more primitive functions, carried out the
important duties of receiving and disbursing the revenues which the king thus
obtained; and on them must have fallen the duty of seeing that the supplies,
which the Vaichyas were required to provide for the maintenance of the king's
household, were duly forthcoming. The condition of these officers is indeed
probably to be compared with that of the household of the early English and
Norman kings.
An officer, not included in the list of the Ratnins but often mentioned
in the texts of the period, was the Sthapati; and we learn that it was the
Sthapati of Dushtaritu who restored him to the kingdom of the Srinjayas after
he had been expelled thence by his subjects. He may have been a governor of
part of the kingdom; but the more likely interpretation of the term is "chief
judge", an official who doubtless combined executive as well as judicial
functions. Later however in the Sutras we hear of a Nishada-Sthapati which may
mean a "governor of Nishadas", apparently the ruler of some outlying
aboriginal tribes, who had been reduced to subjection and placed under the
royal control.
Of the actual functions of the king we hear little detail. He still led
in war—the Kuru-Panchala princes sallied forth to raid in the dewy season and
returned in the hot weather as a matter of course—but the Senani appears as
leader in charge under him. From the Sutras and from a stray reference in the
Chatapatha Brahmana, he seems to have taken a very active part in the
administration of the criminal law. There can be no doubt that he controlled
the land of the tribe. It is not, however, necessary to ascribe to this period
the conception of the royal ownership of all the land, though it appears in the
Greek sources from the time of Megasthenes downwards, and is evidenced later by
the law-books of the time. He had, it is true, the right to expel a Brahman or
a Vaigya at will, though we do not know expressly that he could do this in the
case of a Kshatriya. But these considerations point to political superiority
rather than to ownership proper; and we may assume that, when he gave grants
of land to his retainers, he granted not ownership but privileges such as the
right to receive dues and maintenance from the cultivators. There is a clear
distinction between this action and the conferring of ownership; and it may be
doubted if the actual gift of land was approved in this epoch: the only case
of which we hear is one reported in the Chatapatha and the Aitareya Brahmanas,
in which the king Vichvakarman Bhauvana gave land to the priests who sacrificed
for him, but the Earth itself rebuked his action. It is more probable that, at
this time, the allotment of land was determined by the king or the noble to
whom he had granted rights of superiority according to customary law, and that
gifts not in accordance with this law were disapproved. It is hardly necessary
to point out the close similarity between such a state of affairs and that
existing at the present day in parts of West Africa, where kings have
introduced for purposes of personal gain the practice of dealing as absolute
owners with lands, which, according to the strict system of tribal law, they
had no power to allocate save in accordance with the custom of the tribe. Nor
is it inconsistent with this view that the king had an arbitrary power of
removing a subject from his land. That power flowed from his sovereignty, and
though disapproved was acquiesced in, we may presume, just as in West Africa;
while the dealing of kings with the land by way of absolute ownership was
regarded as a complete breach of the tribal law, the actual removal from his
land of any individual was recognized as a royal prerogative, even if the power
were misused.
In curious contrast with the comparative wealth of information regarding
the king, is the silence of our texts on the assembly of the people. The samiti
or the sabha is not rarely mentioned in these texts; and we cannot assume that
the assembly had lost its power, though it may have diminished in importance.
Even this, however, we cannot absolutely assert; for we hear so often of
expelled kings that we must believe that the people were far from obedient to a
yoke which rested on them too heavily. But there must have been in the
extension of the realm a tendency to diminish the possibility of frequent
meetings of the samiti, and accordingly some diminution in its control over the
state. At any rate, there are indications, if no conclusive proof, that there
was growing up within the members of the sabha a distinction between those who
attended only at the great meetings and the sabhasads, or "assessors", who
attended regularly; and it may be that for judicial purposes the activity of the
sabhd was entrusted to a smaller number, the Homeric gerontes, unless indeed we
are to trace judicial functions to an origin in voluntary arbitrations.
On judicial matters we learn but little more than in the preceding
period. Serious crimes like killing an embryo, the murder of a Brahman, and the
murder of a man occur in lists of sins together with minor defects, such as the
possession of bad nails. Other more serious crimes mentioned are stealing gold
and drinking the sura, while treachery to the king is recognized as a capital
offence. There are traces of a growing sense of justice in the discussions
which are recorded in the case of the accidental death of a boy through the
carelessness of the king and the Purohita, who were driving in a chariot. But
the procedure in cases of crime is still quite uncertain: the king may have
presided and the tribe or the assessors may have judged; but for this result
we can rely only on the fact that the king is said to wield the rod of justice,
and that in the case of the accidental death of the boy the matter is stated to
have been referred to the Ikshvakus who decided that an expiation was due. In
the case of theft in the Chhandogya Upanishad we find the axe ordeal applied,
apparently under the direction of the king; but this is the solitary case of an
ordeal known in Vedic literature as a part of criminal procedure. In the Sutras
we hear of the king with his own hand striking a confessed thief. On the other
hand, beside the public organization of criminal justice, there was still the
system of private vengeance tempered by the wergeld. The Sutras fix the wergeld
of the Kshatriya at 1000 cows, of the Vaicha at 100, and of the Chudra at 10,
with a bull over and above for the king, according to the text of Baudhayana.
This seems to indicate a stage when the royal power had extended sufficiently
to secure that the wergeld should be accepted, and that the insult to the royal
peace required the appeasement of the king and his reward for his intervention
by the gift of a bull. The lower position of women is shown by one text which
assigns in her case only the same wergeld as for a Chudra. Unhappily, the texts
are so vague that we cannot be certain whether the payment in the case of a
Chudra was always required or whether he might be slain with impunity by his master,
as the term "to be slain at pleasure" applied to him in the Aitareya Brahmana
suggests.
We have also very little information regarding civil law. The use of an
ordeal in this connection is attested only by the case of Vatsa who proved his
purity of descent, which was assailed, by walking unharmed through fire.
Presumably, civil cases might be decided by the king with assessors; but this
view rests only on the analogy of other peoples and on the later practice in
India itself. We know for certain that a Brahman had preference in his law
cases; but whether because it was a moral duty of the witnesses to bear
testimony in his favor, or for the judges to give judgment for him, cannot be
decided from the passage of the Taittiriya Samhita which records the
preference. As regards the substance of the law we learn the outlines of the
law of succession: a father might in his lifetime divide his property among
his sons, in which case he seems to have had a free hand as to their shares if
he grew old and helpless, they themselves might divide it, while in the
division among the sons on his death the older son received the larger share.
Women were excluded from the inheritance. Similarly, a woman had no property of
her own: if her husband died, she passed to his family with the inheritance
like the Attic epikleros. Her earnings, if any, were the property of husband or
father. The Chudra seems in law to have been also without capacity of owning
property in his own right. As in the period of the Rigveda, there is no
evidence of joint family ownership of any property, even in the case of land,
though, as we have seen, land at this epoch was not considered a suitable form
of gift. There is a clear reference on the other hand to the allotment of land
by the Kshatriya, presumably in accordance with the customary law. There is no
trace of the development of the law of contract: much work was doubtless done
by slaves or by hereditary craftsmen who received customary remuneration from
the villagers, not payment for each piece of work.
On the whole, there seems to have been some decline in this period in
the position of women: as has been seen, in one of the Sutra texts her wergeld
is assimilated to that of a Chudra and her lack of proprietary power must
have tended to decrease her prestige. The polygamy of the kings is now fully
established; and, presumably, the practice of the sovereigns was followed by
the richer of their subjects. In a number of passages in the Bralmanas it has
been sought to find proof that female morality was not highly estimated; but
this cannot be established; and it is a mistake to suppose that the exposure of
female children was practised. On the other hand, the preference for sons
becomes more and more pronounced: a daughter is a source of misery, a son a
light in the highest heaven. Generally speaking, the increased complexity of
society seems to have been accompanied by an increase of crime and moral
laxity, as appears from the curious litany in the Yajurvedas where Rudra is
hailed as the protector of every kind of thief and ruffian.
In agriculture and pastoral pursuits progress was doubtless made. The
plough was large and heavy: we hear of as many as twenty-four oxen being
harnessed to one: it had a sharp point and a smoothed handle. In addition to
irrigation, which was known in the Rigveda, the use of manure is referred to
several times. In place of the indeterminate yava of the Rigveda many kinds of
grain are mentioned, and yava is restricted, in all probability, to the sense
"barley". Among those names are wheat, beans, corn, sesamum from which oil was
extracted, and various
others. Rice, both domesticated and wild, was much used. The seasons of the
different grains are briefly summed up in the Taittiriya Samhita: barley, sown
no doubt, as at present, in winter, ripened in summer: rice, sown in the
rains, ripened in autumn: beans and sesamum, planted in the time of the summer
rains, ripened in the winter and the cold season. There were two seasons of
harvest according to the same authority; and another text tells us that the
winter crops were ready in March. The farmer had, as now, constant troubles to
contend with: moles destroyed the seed, birds and other creatures injured the
young shoots; and both drought and excessive rain were to be feared: the
Atharvaveda provides us with a considerable number of spells to avoid blight
and secure a good harvest. Cucumbers are alluded to, perhaps as cultivated;
but there is no certain reference to tree culture, though frequent mention is
made of the great Indian trees like the Achvattha, the Ficus religiosa, and the
Nyagrodha, the Ficus indica, and the different forms of the jujube are
specially named.
Even more striking is the great development of industrial life and the
sub-division of occupations. The list of victims at the symbolical human
sacrifice of the later texts of the Yajurveda provides us with a large variety
of such occupations; and, after making all allowances, it is impossible to
doubt that the lists represent a good deal of fact. We hear of hunters, of
several classes of fishermen, of attendants on cattle, of fire-rangers, of
ploughers, of charioteers, of several classes of attendants, of makers of
jewels, basket-makers, washermen, rope-makers, dyers, chariot-makers, barbers,
weavers, slaughterers, workers in gold, cooks, sellers of dried fish, makers of
bows, gatherers of wood, doorkeepers, smelters, footmen, messengers, carvers
and seasoners of food, potters, smiths and so forth. Professional acrobats are
recorded, and players on drums and flutes. Beside the boatman appears the
oarsman, and the poleman; but there is still no hint of sea-borne commerce or
of more than river navigation, though we need not suppose that the sea was
unknown, at least by hearsay, to the end of the period. There is a trace of
police officials in the Ugras who occur in one passage of the Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad; and a Gramyavadin or village judge appears to have held a court for
petty cases in the village. Among the priests themselves, we find the
sub-division of Chhandogas, the singers of Samans, while the Charakas were
wandering students, a special branch of whom are said to have founded the
schools of the Black Yajurveda. Moreover, in accordance with the tendency to
sub-divide and formulate, the life of the priest is now more rigidly regulated: he must pass as a preliminary through the apprenticeship of being a
Brahmacharin. In this stage he is taught by a master, for whom in return he
does all the necessary work of the day and for whom he begs or otherwise
provides food. Two important features of later village life in India appear in
the forms of the astrologer and the barber. Of women's work we learn of the
dyer, the embroiderer, the worker in thorns, and the basket-maker. The merchant
is often mentioned, and the usurer has a special name: it is of interest that
the term Chreshthin several times occurs, denoting at least a wealthy merchant,
and possibly already the word has its later technical sense of the head of a
merchant gild.
The advance of civilization is seen also in the more extended knowledge
of the metals: as compared with the gold and the ayas, of doubtful meaning, of
the Rigveda, this period knows tin, lead, and silver of which ornamented
bowls are made, while ayas is differentiated as red ayas, presumably copper,
and dark or black ayas, which must be iron. Another sign of the new era is the
definite references to the keeping of tame elephants, the guarding of elephants
being one of the occupations occurring in the Yajurveda texts. But there is no
hint that the elephant was yet used for war as it was already in the time of
Ctesias. The use of horses for riding had certainly become more common; but no
clear reference is made to the employment of cavalry in war, though that was
usual by the time of Alexander's invasion.
Little change can be traced in the social life of the time. The use of
houses of wood continued; and, as a result, we have not a single relic
remaining of the architecture of the period. Nor have we any coins : it is not
probable, indeed, that a regular coinage had begun, though the path to this
development was already opened by the use of the krishnala, the berry of the
Elbrus precatorius, as a unit of weight. We hear in the Brahmanas of the
chatamana, a piece of gold in weight equivalent to a hundred krishnalas, and
such pieces of gold were clearly more or less equivalent to currency and must
have been used freely by the merchants, of whose activities we hear so little
in the sacred texts. The nishka, originally a gold ornament, was also at this
time a unit of value; and the cow as a unit was probably in course of
supersession. The style of clothing seems to have continued unchanged, though
we hear more of the details: among other things we are told of woollen
garments, robes dyed with saffron, and silk raiment. The food of the Indian
remained unaltered: the eating of meat is, indeed, here and there censured, as
for instance in a hymn of the Atharvaveda where meat eating is classed with the
drinking of the surd, as a sinful act, and meat might be avoided like other
things by one who was keeping a vow. But it was still the custom to slay a
great ox or goat for the entertainment of a guest, and the great sage
Yajnavalkya ate meat of much cows and oxen, provided that the flesh was
amsala, a word of doubtful import, rendered either "firm" or "tender" by
various authorities. The doctrine of ahimsa, which forbids the doing of injury
to any animal, was indeed only in embryo in this period, and was not fully
developed until the growth of the belief in transmigration came to strengthen
the philosophic tenets of the Brahmanas as to the unity of all existence. The
amusements of the day were, as in the period of the Rigveda, the chariot race,
dicing, of which we have several elaborate but not very clear accounts, and
dancing. The term Chailusha appears in the list of victims at the human
sacrifice, and the sense 'actor' has been seen in it. Taken in conjunction
with the dozen or so of hymns which show a dialogue form it has been supposed
to indicate that the Rigveda knew of a ritual drama, the direct precursor of
the drama of later India. But the evidence adduced is insufficient to bear the
strain of the hypothesis.
In one respect there seems to have been a distinct retrogression since
the age of the Rigveda. In that Samhita there is frequent mention of the
physician's skill, and wonderful deeds are ascribed to the Achvins as healers of
diseases. As early as the Yajurveda Samhitas, however, the physician appears
to be held in less esteem: the Achvins were said to have made themselves
inferior to the other gods by their practice of medicine, by which they made
themselves too familiar with all sorts of people. The Atharvaveda contains much
which gives a sad picture of the medical practice of the day: against the
numerous diseases which it mentions it had nothing better to oppose than the
use of herbs and water accompanied by strange spells, based on sympathetic
magic. The number of diseases recorded by differing names is large: the most
frequent was fever, no doubt the malaria which still haunts India; and others
mentioned are consumption, haemorrhoids, abscesses, scrofula, dysentery, boils,
swellings, tumours on the neck, convulsions, ulcers, scab, rheumatism, tearing
pains, headache, leprosy, jaundice, cramp, senility, and others less easy to
identify. Various eye diseases were known; and the use of a sand bag to stop
bleeding is recorded. The dissection of the animal victims at the sacrifices
gave the opportunity to acquire knowledge of the bones of the body, but on the
whole the facts recorded, especially in the Atharvaveda and the Chatapatha
Brahmana, give us no very elevated opinion of the accuracy of the Vedic
physician in this regard.
Astronomy
On the other hand, a distinct advance was unquestionably made in regard
to astronomical knowledge. The Rigveda knows only, so far as we can see, the
year of 360 days divided into twelve months of thirty days each, which is six
days longer than the synodic lunar year, and nearly five and a quarter days too
short for the solar year. To bring the year into something like order,
intercalation seems to have been attempted quite early : we hear in a riddle
hymn of the Rigveda of the intercalary month, the thirteenth. In the
Samhitas the system is slightly more developed; and possibly some efforts were
being made to arrange intercalation in a cycle of five years in such a manner
that the years and the seasons would be made to coincide; but it is fairly
clear that a satisfactory method had not yet been obtained. The Samhitas,
however, give us the names of the twelve months arranged very artificially in
six seasons, and they introduce to us the important doctrine of the Nakshatras,
or "lunar mansions", groups of stars selected as roughly indicating the parts
of the sky in which the moon appeared in the course of a periodic month of
27-28 days. In the Rigveda the term Nakshatra seems usually to mean no more
than star; and it is only in the admittedly late marriage hymn that
the names of two of the Nakshatras proper are found though in altered forms.
The number of the Nakshatras is variously given as twenty-seven in the
Taittiriya Samhita and the Kathaka lists and usually later, and as twenty-eight
in the lists of the Maitrayani Samhita and the Atharvaveda. As the periodic
month has between 27 and 28 days, the variation may be primitive: of the
allied systems the Chinese Sieou and the Arabic Manazil have twenty-eight: the
missing star Abhijit in the smaller enumeration may have fallen out for a
variety of causes; and it seems easier to assume this than to regard it as a
later addition. The use of the Nakshatras offered a simple and effective means
of fixing dates by the conjunction of the new or full moon with a particular
Nakshatra, and in the Brahmana period a further step was taken: on some
arbitrary basis which we cannot now determine, twelve of the Nakshatra names in
adjectival form were chosen to represent the months. It might have been
expected that the months represented by these names would be lunar, but they
are, as a matter of fact, the twelve months of the traditional year of 360
days. The whole series of the new names is not found until the Sutra period;
but the vitality of the new system is adequately proved by the fact that the
old series of twelve given in the Samhitss corresponding to the six seasons
is practically ignored in the later literature.
The origin of the Nakshatras has formed the subject of most lively
controversy: it is clear that the Vedic Indians knew very little about
astronomy, for it is extremely doubtful whether the planets were known at all
in the Brahmana period. But it is not impossible that, even at this epoch, the
Nakshatras could have been discovered, for the achievement is a rude one. The
question is, however, complicated by the existence of the Arabian Manazil and
the Chinese Sieou. The Manazil are better chosen as lunar mansions than the
Indian Nakshatras: borrowing on the part of India from Arabia cannot be proved
in view of the late date of the Arabian evidence, while the superiority of the
Arabian system seems to make it improbable that it should have been derived from
India. The Chinese evidence is early enough to allow of borrowing; and the
dependence of India on China has been maintained by Biot and de Saussure; but
the difficulties in the way of this view are really insuperable. It remains
therefore as the most plausible view that the Nakshatras are derived from
Babylon, though direct proof of the existence of the Nakshatras there has yet
to be discovered.
Compared with the case of the Nakshatras there is little other evidence
of the contact of India with other civilizations in this period. In the
Chatapatha Brahmana for the first time there appears the legend of the flood and
the saving of Manu by a great fish; and it is most unlikely that we are to see
here any reminiscence of the former Aryan home and the crossing of the
Hindu Kush. It is therefore possible that the legend may be of Semitic origin;
but, if so, as usual the Indians have completely appropriated the motive, so
that the borrowing cannot be proved. It has been suggested that the knowledge
of iron was derived from Babylon; but this is merely a conjecture which has at
present no support in evidence. A sea-borne commerce with Babylon cannot be
proved for this epoch either by the evidence of Vedic literature or by the
references in the Book of Kings to apes and peacocks by names which are
believed to have had an Indian origin. The history of the alphabet has been
used by Buhler to show that it was borrowed by traders from a South Semitic
source via Mesopotamia about 800 BC; but we cannot lay any stress upon this
date. It seems, indeed, most probable that writing was introduced by traders
and that it was only gradually adopted into its proper form for the expression
of the Sanskrit language. At what date this took place is not really
susceptible of proof: there is no certain reference to writing in the
literature of a date earlier than the fourth century BC; and the real
development of writing belongs in all likelihood to the fifth century BC. It
was the end of the sixth century that saw the invasion of Darius and the
annexation of the territory round the Indus; and, prior to that event, there is
no strong evidence of a really active contact between India and the outer
world. It is, indeed, probable enough that even before the time of Darius,
Cyrus had relations with the tribes on the right bank of the Indus, and Arrian
asserts that the Astakenoi and the Astakenoi were subject to the Assyrian
kings; but everything points to the fact that, in the period of the
Brahmanas, relations with the Gandharas and other tribes in the remote
north-west were very slight. It is also significant that there is no really
certain case of an inscription of any sort in India before the third century
BC.
The development in religion and philosophy in the period is remarkable.
The ritual has grown to very large proportions; and with the ritual the number
of the priests required at a sacrifice had increased until sixteen or seventeen
are enumerated as taking part in the more important offerings. The mere
offerings of vegetable food and milk are comparatively unimportant; but the
animal sacrifice is increasingly elaborated, and the Soma sacrifice has
developed largely. In addition to the simplest form of the Soma sacrifice
occupying one day, there are innumerable other forms culminating in the Sattras
which might last any time from twelve days to a year or years. It is
significant that, at the bottom of this priestly elaboration, is much really
popular religion. Thus the Rajasuya, or royal consecration, is fundamentally a
popular rite for the anointing of the king: the Vajapeya betrays a popular
origin in the prominence in it of a chariot race, once probably the main
element; the Gavamayana, a Sattra lasting a year, is distinguished by the
ritual of the Mahavrata day in which long since was 'recognised a primitive
performance celebrating the winter solstice. The horse-sacrifice is at bottom
the elaboration of a simple rite of sympathetic magic; but it has been so
elaborated as to combine everything which could make an appeal to the warrior
Indian king and induce him to distribute abundant largesse on the celebrators.
But beside these and other popular festivals, which the priests have worked
over, stands one of the highest interest to the priest, which seems to reflect
a new conception of theology. It is the building of the altar for the sacred
fire; in one sense no doubt this was an ancient and simple rite, accompanied
as so often by the slaying of a man in order to secure the abiding character of
the structure: the Brahmana texts avoid requiring any such actual slaughter,
though they record it as a deed of the past; but they elaborate the building
out of all reason and utility. The only explanation of this action must be that
offered by Eggeling, that, in the building up of the fire altar, the Brahmans
sought to symbolize the constitution of the unity of the universe. As we have
seen, in the Purusha hymn of the Rigveda occurs the conception of the creation
of the universe from the Purusha, and in the theology of the Brahmanas the
Purusha is identified with Prajapati, "lord of creatures", and the sacrifice is
conceived as constantly recurring in order to maintain the existence of the
universe. To render this possible is the end of the fire altar, the building of
which is the reconstruction of the universe in the shape of Prajapati.
Prajapati, again, is identified with Agni, the fire of the altar, and both
Prajapati and Agni are the divine counterparts of the human sacrificer. But
Prajapati is himself Time, and Time is in the long run death, so that the
sacrificer himself becomes death, and by that act rises superior to death, and
is for ever removed from the world of illusion and trouble to the world of
everlasting bliss. In this the true nature of Prajapati and of the sacrificer
is revealed as intelligence, and the Chatapatha Brahmapa urges the seeker for
truth to meditate upon the self, made up of intelligence and endowed with a
body of spirit, a form of light and an ethereal nature.
The same doctrine appears in another form in the Upanishads which are
engaged with the discussion of the underlying reality. They agree in this that
all reality in the ultimate issue must be reduced to one, called variously
brahman, "the holy power", or atman, "the self". Moreover, the Upanishads
agree in regarding the absolute to be unknowable, and though they ascribe to it
intelligence they deprive that term of meaning by emptying it of all thought.
If the real is the absolute alone, the existence of the appearance of this
world must be explained; but naturally enough the Upanishads do not
successfully attempt this task; and it was not until the time of Chankaracharya
in the beginning of the ninth century AD that it was found possible to
reconcile the doctrines of the different texts by the view that all existence
is merely illusion. This is perhaps a logical development of the doctrine of
the Upanishads; but the Upanishads were groping after truth and did not attempt
to deduce all the consequences of their guesses at the nature of reality.
There was one consequence which followed so clearly from the new
conception of existence that it is enunciated, though not very decidedly, in
the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, namely that there was no consciousness after
death in the case of him who realised the true nature of the self as
intelligence without thought. But this conception plays a very small part in
the texts compared with the new theory of transmigration. There is no real sign
of this doctrine in the Brahmanas proper, but there is a certain amount of
preparation for its appearance in the gradual development of the doctrine that
not even after death is the horror of death ended: a man may die repeated
deaths in the next world. If this conception be transferred to the present
world, then the doctrine of transmigration is produced, and in the Upanishads
this doctrine is clearly and expressly enunciated. The Chhandogya and Brihadaranyaka
agree in the main outlines of the new belief: the forest ascetic who has
realized the nature of brahman, after death goes by the way of the gods to be
absorbed in brahman and never again to be born: the man who has done good
deeds but has not attained the saving knowledge goes to the world of the moon
to reside there until the fruit of his deeds is exhausted, when he is born
again first as a plant and then as man or at once as a man: the wicked on the
contrary are born as outcasts, dogs, or swine, according to the Chhandogya, as
birds, beasts, and reptiles according to the Brihadaranyaka. There is a
variant version on the Kaushitaki which makes all first go to the moon; but the
essential point is the acceptance as a matter of certainty of the new doctrine
of transmigration. The Brihadaranyaka also has an important addition to the
doctrine in the form of the gospel of karman, action, which determines on a
man's death the nature of his next birth. In the Buddhist view the idea recurs
in the simple form that the self, which is recognised as persisting through
transmigration by the Braman, is discarded as needless and the karman alone is
asserted to possess reality.
The origin of this doctrine may have been helped by the widely prevalent
view among tribes of animists that the souls on death or even in life can pass
into other forms, animal or vegetable. We have seen that in the Rigveda in one
hymn the soul is regarded as going to the waters or the plants; and we have no
reason to doubt that such ideas were prevalent among the aboriginal tribes with
which the Aryans mixed. But these vague ideas are totally inadequate to
account for the belief in transmigration, and the theory must, it would seem,
have been a discovery of the schools of seekers after the nature of truth, who
arrived at it on the one side from the popular beliefs of the peoples among
whom they lived, and on the other from the conception of the Brahman as that
death could be repeated in the other world. The doctrine led directly to
pessimism, but the Upanishads are not themselves pessimistic; and we obtain
thus a valuable evidence of their priority to the rise of Buddhism, which is
saturated with the doctrine of the misery of the universe. The extraordinary
success of the doctrine shows that it was in harmony with the spirit of the
Indian people, and suggests what is otherwise probable, that by the end of the
period of the Brahmanas the influence of the Aryan strain was waning, and that
the true Indian character of the intellectual classes was definitely formed.
As we have already seen, the tradition makes kings take part in the
discussions which marked the formation of the doctrine of the absolute, and
even hints that the doctrine was in some way a special tenet of the ruling
class; but it is doubtful if we can accord full credit to this tradition, or
believe that the brahman doctrine was the reaction of the noble class against
the excessive devotion of the priests to the ritual. Policy adequately
explains the part assigned to them by the Brahmans, whose aim it was to make
their patrons appreciate that their researches were such as to deserve
support. Parallel with the development of philosophy there was proceeding the
movement which leads to the religions of modern India, the exaltation of Rudra
and in a minor degree of Vishnu to the position of a great god. Prajapati is
indeed the main subject of the theosophical speculation of the Brahmana texts,
a purpose to which his name as 'lord of creatures' especially lent itself; but
Prajapati had no claims to be a god of the people, and the position of Rudra as
a popular deity is sufficiently shown by the litanies to him in the Samhitas of
the Yajurveda, and by the whole outlook of such texts as the Aitareya,
Kaushitaki, and Chatapatha Brahmanas. When Prajapati committed incest with his
daughter, the Aitareya tells us that the gods were wroth, and from their most
dread forms produced the god Bhutapati, lord of creatures, who represents
one aspect of Rudra's activities. He pierced Prajapati and thereby acquired his
dominion over all cattle. In another passage the wording of a Rigvedic verse is
altered to avoid the mention of Rudra's dread name: in yet another he appears
at the sacrifice in black raiment and appropriates to himself the sacrificial
victim. We need not suppose that in this presentation the Brahmanas were creating
a new figure: rather they were adapting to their system, as far as they could,
a great god of the people. But the Rudra of this period can hardly be regarded
as a mere development of the Rudra of the Rigveda: it seems most probable that
with the Vedic Rudra is amalgamated an aboriginal god of vegetation, closely
connected with pastoral life.
Vishnu cannot be said to have won any such assured place as Rudra, who
is already hailed as the great god par excellence, and already bears the
name of Chiva, "propitious", which is to be his final appellation. But the
constant identification of Vishnu and the sacrifice is, in view of the
extraordinary importance attached to the sacrifice by the Brahmans, a sure sign
that he counted for much in Vedic life, and that he shared with Rudra the
veneration of the people, who may in different localities have been the
followers of one or the other god respectively. For the rest, while we now
obtain many details of the lower side of the religion in the spells of the Atharvaveda,
the pantheon of the Rigveda remains unaltered save in such minor aspects as the
new prominence of the Apsarasas, the mechanical opposition of the gods and the
Asuras, and the rise of snake worship, which seems to have been due to the
imitation of the aboriginal tribes. On the other hand, the attitude of the
priests to the gods as revealed in the sacrifice has lost whatever it had of
spontaneity and simple piety. It is no doubt possible to exaggerate these
qualities even in the earlier hymns of the Rigveda; but their absence in the
later Samhitas is unquestionable. The theory of sacrifice is bluntly do ut des;
and even in that theory the sacrificers had so little trust that the whole
sacrificial apparatus is dominated by sympathetic magic. So convinced is the
priest of his powers in this regard that the texts explain that he can ruin as
he pleases, by errors in the sacrifice deliberately committed, the patron for
whom he is acting, and in whose interest he is presumed to be at work. It is a
sordid picture; and, as we have seen, the higher spirits turned away from a
hocus pocus, which they must have despised as heartily as any Buddhist, to the
interpretation of the reality underlying phenomena. Yet it is characteristic of
the Indian genius that, though it evolved views which must have rendered all
the sacrificial technique logically of no avail, it made no effort to break
with the sacrifice which was allowed to stand as a preliminary towards the
attainment of that enlightenment which the priests professed to impart.
The language of the Samhitas in their verse portions is similar to that
of the Rigveda, especially in the tenth book and in the later additions to the
other books. The language of the prose represents the speech of the Brahman
schools of the day: it differs from that of the verse by the removal of
abnormalities, and by much greater precision shown, for example, in the exact
use of the tenses, the 'narrative perfect' being at first carefully eschewed,
and by the disappearance, except in a narrow sphere, of the use of the
unaugmented past tenses of the verb with modal meaning. There seems in one
passage of the Chatapatha Brahmana to be a curious admission that other tribes had
not preserved the purity of the Vedic speech: the Asuras are credited in that
text with the utterance of the words he 'lavo, which may be interpreted "Ho! ye foes", and, if so, can be explained as Prakrit forms.
Similarly, as we have already seen, the Vratyas are described as regarding the
Vedic speech as difficult to pronounce, no doubt because of its conjunct
consonants which the Prakrits avoid. In both cases the reference is probably to
tribes of the Magadha country, and the Magadhi Prakrit is marked by both the
points alluded to. There are also signs of this corruption of the language
through the contact with the aborigines in the fact that in the spells of the
Atharvaveda are found several forms which can only be accounted for as Prakritisms.
Beyond these generalities we cannot affect to estimate how far the process of
the transformation of the language in the popular speech had gone: the earliest
foreign evidence, that from the Greek records, shows that many names were
reported by Megasthenes and others in Prakrit form; and, in the middle of the
third century BC, the inscriptions of Atoka are all written in Prakrit
dialects varying considerably in detail from one another. It is therefore
reasonable to suppose that beside the language of the Brahman schools, there
existed more popular forms of speech ; but everything points to the fact that
the deeds of princes were still sung in a language of the same form as the
priestly speech. In metre a significant change can be seen: the later hymns
exhibit, when written in the eight syllable metre, a distinct tendency to be
composed of stanzas in which the four lines are no longer independent in
structure, but the first and third and the second and fourth respectively are
assimilated. The latter pair is made to end with a definite iambic cadence,
while the first and third on the contrary are made to end with an iambus
followed by a trochee, thus producing an effect of contrast and setting a gulf
between the old and the new form of versification. This new form is far from
being exclusively employed even in the latest versification of the period, but
in the epic it is firmly established, and the variants reduced to narrow
limitsl.
Interesting as are the Samhitas and the Brahmanas from the point of
view of the history of civilization and religion, as literature they are hardly
ever of substantial value. Much of the speculation of the Brahmanas is utterly
puerile and seems to be the product of a decadent intellect. On the other hand,
the real interest of the Upanishads is undeniable: these primitive
philosophical fragments exhibit a genuine spirit of enquiry, and here and there
do not fail to rise to real dignity and impressiveness
For the date of the epoch of the Brahmanas we are again thrown back on
those considerations of literary and social development which we have found to
be the sole trustworthy criteria for the dating of the epoch of the Rigveda.
The lower limit is given by the fact that Buddhism accepts from the Upanishads
the doctrines of transmigration and pessimism, the latter of which had been
developed as a doctrine of obvious validity from the facts of transmigration.
Other indications, such as the want of any trace of the knowledge of writing,
show that we cannot legitimately carry the Upanishads of the older type later
than 550 orperhaps more probably 600 B<c. The fixing of the language which is
posterior to the Brahmanas may be dated at latest at 300 BC; and the
earlier Sutras probably go back to at least 400 BC and very possibly earlier.
These are important considerations and their cumulative effect is harmonious
and practically decisive of an early date for the civilization which has been
described. On considerations of probable development, the beginning of the
Brahmana period may fairly be put back to 800 BC.
As with the Rigveda, attempts have been made to show that these dates
are much too low and that astronomical data enable us to carry the Brahmanas
much further back. The lists of the Nakshatras all begin with Krittikas, and we
know that in the sixth century AD the constellation which then headed the
Nakshatras was chosen because the vernal equinox took place when the sun
was in conjunction with that Nakshatra. From the precession of the
equinoxes, we are enabled to arrive at the conclusion, that the position of
Krittikas at the vernal equinox must have taken place in the third millennium
BC. This has been supported by a passage in the Chatapatha Brahmana where it
is said that Krittikas did not move from the eastern quarter at that time. But
we have no evidence whatever to connect the sun and the Nakshatras at this
period, and the notice regarding the position of Krittikas cannot be taken
seriously in a work which shows so little power of scientific observation of
facts as the Chatapatha. Moreover if, as it is probable, the Nakshatra system
was borrowed ready made, we cannot even conjecture for what reason Krittikas
was placed first. More promising is a definite notice contained in the
Kaushitaki Bramana and repeated in the Jyotisha, a late Vedic work on
astronomy, if indeed it can be dignified with this title, that the winter
solstice took place at the new Moon in Maghas. From this datum results varying
from 1391-1181 BC were early deduced by different investigators; but these
conclusions can claim no scientific value, as they rest on assumptions as to
the exact meaning of the passage which cannot be justified. The possible margin
of error in the calculations is at least five hundred years; and we are therefore
reduced to the view that this evidence only indicates that the observation
which is recorded was made some centuries BC. The same conclusion can be drawn
from the fact that in quite a number of places the month Phalguna is called the
beginning of the year. In the view of Jacobi, this shows that the year began
with the winter solstice at full moon in Phalguni, and thus would correspond
with his view that in the Rigveda the sun at the summer solstice was in
Uttara-Phalguni. But, in this case also, the result is unacceptable; for it is
nowhere stated that the beginning of the year was dated from the winter
solstice. The most probable explanation is that the full moon in Phalguni was
deemed to be the beginning of the year, because it marked, at the time when it was so termed, the beginning
of spring. Since the new moon in Magha was at the winter solstice, the full
moon in Phalguni would fall about a month and a half later in the first week of
February, which is compatible with Feb. 7, the Veris initium in the Roman
calendar, and which is a perfectly possible date for about 800 BC, especially
when it is remembered that the division of the year into three periods of four
months was always a rough one, and the beginning of spring had to be placed
early so as to allow of the rains, which are definitely marked out by the fall
of the first rain, to fill the period from about June 7 to October 7. With this
explanation the theory, that the mention of the full moon in Phalguni as the
beginning of the year records an observation of the fourth millennium BC,
disappears, and still more the theory that the mention of the month Caitra as
the beginning of the year carries us back to the sixth millennium. Nor can any
more trust be put in the argument that the mention in the late marriage ritual
of the Dhruva, a fixed star shown to the bride and bridegroom as a symbol of
constancy, points to an observation made at a period when there was a real
fixed pole star, i.e. in the third millennium BC. We do not even know whether
this part of the rite goes back to the period of the Brahmanas; and, even if
it did, for so little scientific a purpose there was no need of anything save a
fairly bright star not too distant from the pole. Ingenious therefore as all
these arguments are, they must be dismissed as affording no real certainty of
correctness. The most that can be said is that they tend to support the period
800-600 BC as a reasonable date for the period of the civilization of the
Brahmanas.
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