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Introduction
Veda
(in Sanskrit means 'knowledge') is the most ancient sacred literature of
Hinduism, or individual books belonging to that literature. This body of
ancient literature consists primarily of four collections of hymns,
detached poetical portions, and ceremonial formulas. The collections are
called the Rig-Veda, the Sama-Veda, the Yajur-Veda,
and the Atharva-Veda. They are known also as the Samhitas
(roughly 'collection').
Origins and Transmission
The four Vedas were
composed in Vedic, an early form of Sanskrit. The oldest portions are
believed by scholars to have originated largely with the Aryan invaders of
India some time between 1300 and 1000BC; however, the Vedas in their
present form are believed to date only from the close of the 3rd century
BC. Before the writing down of he present texts, sages called rishis
transmitted the Vedic matter orally, changing and elaborating it in the
process. Large masses of material probably taken from the original Aryan
milieu or from the Dravidian culture of India were preserved, however, and
are distinguishable in the texts.
Contents and Use
The first three
Samhitas are primarily ritual handbooks that were used in the Vedic period
by three classes of priests who officiated at ceremonial sacrifices. The Rig-Veda
contains more than 1000 hymns (Sanskrit rig), composed in various
poetic meters and arranged in ten books. The hotri, or reciters, who
invoked the gods by reading its hymns aloud, used it. The Sama-Veda
contains verse portions taken mainly from the Rig-Veda. The udgatri,
or chanters, who sang hymns, or melodies (Sanskrit sama) from Veda,
used this. The Yajur-Veda, which is partly in prose and partly in
verse, contains sacrificial formulas (Sanskrit yaja,'sacrifices').
It was used by the adhvaryu, priests who recited appropriate
formulas from the Yajur-Veda while actually performing the
sacrificial actions.
The fourth Veda, the Atharva-Veda
(in part attributed by tradition to a rishi named Atharvan),
consists almost exclusively of a wide variety of hymns, magical
incantations, and magical spells. Largely for personal, domestic use, it
was not originally accepted as authoritative because of the deviant nature
of its contents. Scholars believe that it dates from a later time and that
it may have been derived mainly from the remnant of the indigenous
pre-Aryan culture. Eventually it was acknowledged as one of the Vedas,
especially after its adoption as a ritual handbook by the Brahmans, the
class of priests officiating at the sacrifices.
Supplementary Writings
Strictly speaking, the
Vedas include the Brahmanas and the mantras. The former are
prose commentaries attached to each of the four Vedas and are concerned
principally with the details and the interpretation of the sacrificial
liturgy. The latter are the poetic stanzas of the four Vedas, mantra
being the term used specifically for the four verse collections. Some
scholars regard the mantras as the oldest part of the Vedas.
Supplementary to the
Brahmanas are later esoteric works known as forest treatises, the Aranyakas
from Sanskrit aranya,'forest.' The Aranyakas were expounded and
written by Brahman sages in forests because it was felt that a proper
understanding of them could be achieved only in seclusion. The final
portions of the Aranyakas are called Upanishads. Profound
metaphysical and speculative works closely linked with the Brahmanas, they
emphasize knowledge and meditation and are the first Hindu attempts at a
systematic treatment of speculative thought. Vedanta and most other
Indian philosophical systems developed from the Upanishads.
The latest products of
the Vedic period are the sutras (Sanskrit sutra, literally 'thread,'
roughly, 'string of rules'). Collections of aphorisms elaborating and
dissertating on the Vedic sacrifices, domestic ceremonies (such as
marriage and funeral rituals), and religious and secular law, the sutras
are significant for their influence on the development of Hindu law. As
works of authority, they are not as highly regarded as the Vedas,
Brahmanas, and Upanishads. The latter, especially the Vedas, are revered
as apaurusheya (Sanskrit, 'not of human origin').
'Veda,' Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000
http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights
reserved.
Details
of the four vedas
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