VOLUME I
INTRODUCTION TO
ORIENTAL CIVILIZATIONS
WM. THEODORE DE BARY, EDITOR
Sources of
Indian Tradition
VOLUME I
GENERAL EDITOR
Ww. Theodore (k Bary CO MPILERS
A L, B&sham R. H Dawlefear Peter Uariy V. Raghavan Royal Weiler
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS New
The addition to the "Records of Civilization: Sources and Studies"
of a group of translations of Oriental historical materials in a clothbound
edition, from which this volume is taken, was made possible by funds
granted by Carnegie Corporation of New York. That Corporation is not, however, the author, owner, publisher, or proprietor of this publication,
and is not to be understood as approving by virtue of its grant any of the
statements made or views expressed therein.
Clothbound editions of Columbia University Press books
are Smyth-sewn and printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper.
ISBN 0-231-08600-8 Copyright 1958 Columbia University Press
Printed in the United States of America
15
PREFACE
This book is part of a new edition o Introduction to Oriental Civiliza-
tions, the three-volume work dealing with the civilizations of Japan,
China, and India and Pakistan published by Columbia University Press
in the series Records of Civilization. It contains source readings that tell
us what the peoples of India have thought about the world they lived in
and the problems they faced living together. It is meant to provide the
general reader with an understanding of the intellectual and spiritual traditions which remain alive in India and Pakistan today. Thus, much
attention is given to religious and philosophical developments in earlier
times which still form part of the Indian heritage and have experienced a considerable revival in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. On the other hand, attention is also given to political, economic, and social
thought, which other surveys, concentrating on classical Indian philos-
ophy, have generally omitted.
Although our aim has been to combine variety with balance in the
selection and presentation of materials, a few words are perhaps neces-
sary concerning special points of emphasis. A glance at the contents will show that religion has furnished the general categories under which tradi-
tional Indian civilization is treated. This implies no judgment that
religion was always the dominant factor in Indian life, but only that in
the body of literature which provides us our texts, religious identities and
continuities are more clearly distinguishable than are those based upon historical chronology or dynastic associations. Next, in this volume some-
what more attention is given to Theravada Buddhism than to Mahayana because the latter is given fuller treatment in the volumes in this series
dealing with China and Japan. In the case of Hinduism the reader will
find that relatively greater emphasis is placed upon the social and devo-
tional aspects of the religion, which have affected great numbers of Hin-
[v]
dus, than upon the philosophical speculations which have generally com-
manded the first attention o educated Indians and Westerners and have
already been widely reproduced in translation. In this volume, dealing
with traditional Indian and Muslim civilization, most o the translations
are new and many of them are of texts previously untranslated into any Western language.
Because of the unfamiliarity and complexity of many subjects not previ-
ously presented in translation, we have found it necessary to include more
historical and explanatory material than is usual in a set of source readings.
Nevertheless, the reader who seeks a fuller knowledge of historical and
institutional background will do well to supplement this text by referring
to a general survey of Indian history and culture.
Given the limitations of an introductory text, we could not hope to deal
with every thinker or movement of importance, but have had to select
those examples which seem best to illustrate the major patterns of Indian
thought in so far as they have been expressed and preserved in writing. In
the modern period the necessity for such selectivity is most apparent. Here
particular prominence has been given to persons actively engaged in lead-
ing organized religious and political movements.
Compilation of Sources of Indian Tradition was originally undertaken
by Andrew Yarrow in connection with the general education program in
Columbia College. These readings were then substantially revised by the
general editor with the assistance of Dr. Royal Weiler of Columbia and
supplemented by Dr. Stephen N. Hay of the University of Chicago. In
making revisions for the present edition, the general editor was assisted by Ainslie T. Embree of Columbia University. It goes without saying that this
volume could not have been compiled without the cooperation of our prin-
cipal contributors: R. N. Dandekar of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research
Institute, Poona, prepared the materials for Chapters I, II, III, X, XI, and
the selection from the Bhagavad Gita in Chapter XIII; A. L. Basham of
the School o Oriental and African Studies, University of London, pre-
pared Chapters IV, V, VI, VII, and VIII; V. Raghavan of the University of Madras prepared Chapters IX, XII, and XIII; Peter Hardy of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, prepared Chapters XIV, XV, XVII, XVIII, and XIX. Their contribution is all the more ap~ preciated because of the patience and forbearance they have shown in re-
[vi]
gard to adjustments which the general editor has had to make in order to achieve uniformity and balance in the volume as a whole. For this reason, it should be emphasized, the editor must bear primary responsibility for
the selection and presentation of the materials contained here.
The final version of these readings owes much to the critical examina- tion and comment of scholarly colleagues. Dr. Basham wishes to record his appreciation to Dr. A. K. Warder for his reading of the draft on Jain- ism and Buddhism. S. M. Ikram, then of the Center for Pakistan Studies, Columbia University, is also to be thanked for reading the chapters on
Muslim India. Visudh Busyakul of the University of Pennsylvania gave Dr. Weiler invaluable advice and assistance, as did Marjorie A. Weiler. Hans Guggenheim performed the exacting task of preparing the chapter decorations for Chapters I-XIX.
This series of readings has been produced in connection with the Co-
lumbia College General Education Program in Oriental Studies, which has been encouraged and supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. For whatever value it may have to the general reader or college student seeking a liberal education that embraces both East and West, a
great debt is owed to Dean Emeritus Harry J. Carman, Dr. Taraknath
Das, and Dean Lawrence H. Chamberlain of Columbia College, who contributed much to the initiation and furtherance of this program.
WM. THEODORE DE BARY
[vii]
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The sources of translations given at the beginning of each selection are rendered as concisely as possible. Full bibliographical data can be obtained
from the list of sources in the clothbound edition. In the reference at the
head of each selection, unless otherwise indicated, the author of the book
is the writer whose name precedes the selection. Where excerpts have been taken from existing translations, they have sometimes been adapted or
edited in the interests of uniformity with the book as a whole.
Indie words appearing in italics as technical terms or tides of works are
rendered in accordance with the standard system of transliteration as
found in Louis Renou's Grammaire Sanskrite (Paris, 1930), pp. xi-xiii, with the exception that here s is regularly used for c. To facilitate pro- nunciation, other Sanskrit terms and proper names appearing in roman
letters are rendered according to the usage of Webster's New International Dictionary, 2d edition, Unabridged, except that here the macron is used
to indicate long vowels and the Sanskrit symbols for s (c) and are uni-
formly transcribed as sh. Similarly, the standard Sanskrit transcription of
c is given as ch. In connection with Theravada Buddhism, the form of
technical terms is that of Pali rather than Sanskrit; the latter, however, is
retained in connection with Jamism. Thus, in Buddhism Pali dhamrna
for Sanskrit dharma, but in Jainism Sanskrit posadha for Prakrit fosaha. Deviations from these principles may occur in passages directly quoted from Indian writers of the seventeenth through twentieth centuries. A word list giving standard Indie equivalents for roman transcriptions will
be found at the end of this volume.
In the pronunciation of Indie words, the accent is usually on tie next
to final syllable if long; otherwise on the nearest long syllable before it.
The long syllable is indicated by the macron (e.g., a, I, u) or a diphthong
(e, o, ai, au), or a vowel followed by more than one consonant (except h).
[ix]
Guide to Pronunciation
a as u in but
a as a in father
i as / in pin I as i in machine
u as u in pull u as u in rule
ri (r), a vowel as er in river
e as ay in say ai as ai in aisle
as o in go au as ow in how ch (c) as in church
sh (s, s) as sh in shape
g as g in get kh as ty in lakehouse
gh as gh in doghouse th as th in anthill
dh as dh in roundhouse
bh as bh in clubhouse
ph as ph in uphill m or n as ng in sing
Guide to the Pronunciation o] Persian and Indo-Persian Words
Short Vowels
a Intermediate between the vowels in the
English words bed and bad
1 As the vowel sound in the English fen u As in the English word put
Long Vowels a as a in father
T as t in police
u as u in prude
Diphthongs ai as ey in they
au as ou in out
In Indo-Persian the majhul vowel sound 6 rhymes with toe; the short vowel
a is closer to the u in sun; and the diphthong au tends more to the majhul
sound, as the o in hose or toe, *
represents the Arabic and Persian letter 'ayn. In Arabic 'ayn is a strong
guttural preceding a vowel. In Persian, however, 'ayn at the beginning of a
word is not pronounced separately from the vowel which goes with it; in the
middle of a word, it has a sound sa'd (or sefd) like the bleating of a sheep; at
the end of a word, in Persian, it is either silent or, more usually given a slight
pronunciation between short "a" and "e" on a rising intonation. *
represents the hamza or glottal stop in Arabic words. It is a jerked hiatus; the Cockney pronunciation of "butter," "better," or "bottle" gives the sound
in the middle of Arabic words; at the beginning of Arabic words it is in-
distinguishable from the vowel that goes with it; at the end it is like the
Persian pronunciation of 'ayn at the end of words.
In Persian words, '
also represents hamza when used to indicate a hiatus between two long vowels, as in the English pronunciation (very distinct) of
"India Office," i.e., "India" (pause) "Office." (Example: Bada'um.)
R.W. AND PH.
[xi]
Without the assistance of many publishers, a book of source readings such as
this is not possible, and we are grateful for the cooperation of the following: Advaita Ashrama, Almora, India; Allen & Unwin, Ltd., London; All-Pakistan
Political Science Association, Lahore; Mohammad Ashraf, Lahore; Asiatic
Society of Mangal, Calcutta; Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondich&y, India; The
Bodley Head, Ltd., London; Clarendon Press, Oxford; Current Book House,
Bombay; Ganesh and Co., Ltd., Madras, India; S. P. Gokhale, Poona, India; Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass*; Hero Publications, Lahore; Indian Printing Works, Lahore; The India Press, Allahabad, India; Kitabistan,
Allahabad, India; S. K. Lahin and Co., Calcutta; Luzac and Co., London; Mao millan & Co., Ltd., London and New York; al-Manar Academy, Lahore; Modern Review, Calcutta; John Murray, London, and the "Wisdom of the
East" series; The Muslim World; G. A. Natesan and Co., Madras, India; The
Navajivaa Trust, Ahmedabad, India; P. M. Neogi, Calcutta; Orient Longmans
Ltd., Calcutta; Oxford University Press, London; Pakistan Herald Press, Ka-
rachi; Panjab University Press, Lahore; People's Publishing House, Ltd., Bom-
bay; Renaissance Publishers, Ltd., Calcutta; Roy and Son, Calcutta; A. W.
Sahasvabuddhe, Sevagram, India; Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, Calcutta; Sar-
vodaya, Bombay; Thcosophical Publishing Society, Banaras, India; Thomas
and Co., Calcutta; Thompson and Co. Ltd., Madras, India; R, B. Tilak, Poona,
India; The Vcdanta Society, New York; Vedic Yantralaya, Ajmer, India; The
Viking Press, Inc., New York; Visvabharati, Calcutta,
CONTENTS
Chronological Table xx
Brahmanism i
Chapter I: The Cosmic Order in the Vedic Hymns 5
Agni, 7; Heaven and Earth, 8; Varuna, 9; Dawn, 10; Indra, n; The
Primeval Sacrifice, 13; The Origin -of the World, 15; The Brah-
machari, 16; A Charm Against Jaundice, 18; Exorcism of Serpents, 18
Chapter 11: The Ritual Order in the Brahmanas 19
The Collection of Materials for the Sacred Fires, 20; The Fetching of
Sacrificial Grass, 22
Chapter III: The Ultimate Reality in the Upantshads 24
The Sacrificial Horse, 25; Sacrifices Unsteady Boats on the Ocean
of Life, 26; The Five Sheaths, 27; The Real Self, 28; The Essential
Reality Underlying the World, 31
The Background of Jainism and Buddhism 35
Chapter IV: The Basic Doctrines of Jainism 42
THE ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF JAINISM 42
JAIN DOCTRINES AND PRACTICES 46
JAIN LITERATO&E 51
Of Human Bondage^ 53; The Man in the Well, 53; Kinsfolk Are No
Comfort in Old Age, 55; All Creation Groans Together in Torment,
56; Crc#urs Gttat and Sjpaall, 57; The Eternal Law, 58; Respect for
[xiii]
Life, 59; The Hero of Penance and Self-Control, 61; Cheerfully En-
dure All Things, 61; Wise Men and Fools, 62; Two Ways of Life,
63; The Refuge of All Creatures, 65; The Final Penance, 65; Moral
Verses, 66
Chapter V, Jain Philosophy and Political Thought 70
Of Space and Time, 72; There is No Creator, 75; The Plurality of
Souls, 78; A Modern Jain Apologist, 80; The Ideal King, I, 83; II, 85; Practical Advice on War and Peace, 86; The Miseries and Dangers of
Politics, 87
Chapter VI: Theravada Buddhism - 90
BASIC DOCTRINES OF THERAVADA BUDDHISM 98
The Four Noble Truths, 98; The Nature of Consciousness and the
Chain of Causation, 99; False Doctrines About the Soul, 102; The
Simile of the Chariot, 103; Change and Identity, 105; The Process
of Rebirth, 106; Karma, 106; Right Mindfulness, 107; The Last In-
structions of the Buddha, 109; The Buddha in Nirvana, in; The
City of Righteousness, in
THE ETHICS OF THERAVADA BUDDHISM 113 The Morals of the Monk, 114; Care of the Body, 115; "Lay Not Up for Yourselves Treasures upon Earth. . . ,", 116; The Virtue of
Friendliness, 117; Hatred and Love, 118; Buddhism and Everyday
Life, 119
SOCIETY AND THE STATE IN THERAVADA BUDDHISM 124 How the World Evolved, 127; The Origin of Society and the State, 128; The Ideal of Government, and the Decay and Growth o Civiliza-
tion, 133; Conditions of the Welfare of Societies, 139; Birth is No Criterion of Worth, 140; Ashoka: The Buddhist Emperor, 142
Chapter VII: Mahayana Buddhism: "The Greater Vehicle" 151
The Bodhisattva, 158; The Mahayana Ideal Is Higher Than That of the Theravada, 159; The Suffering Savior, 159; The Lost Sonr 162; Against Self-Mortification, 166; Joy in All Things, 168; The Good Deeds of the Bodhisattva, 169; The Evils of Meat-Eating, 169; The Gift of Food, 170; The Three Bodies of the Buddha, 172; Emp- tiness, 173; Faith in Emptiness, 175; Karma and Rebirth, 175; Such-
ness, 176; All Depends on the Mind, 177; Nirvana Is Here and Now,
177; Praise of Dharma, 178; Perfect Wisdom Personified, 180; The
Blessings of Peace, 181; The Divine Right (and Duty) of Kings, 182;
Magical Utterances, 185
Chapter VIII: The Vehicle of the Thunderbolt and the Decline of Bud- dhism in India 187
To the Pure All Things Are Pure, 194; Everything Is Buddha, 196
Hinduism 200
Chapter IX: The Four Ends of Man 206
From the Science of Dharma, 208; From the Science of Material Gain: The Conduct of the Ideal King, 209; From the Science of Love,
209; From the Ramayana, 210; From Kahdasa, 210
Chapter X: Dharma, The First End of Man 211
What is Dharma? 215; The Sources and Extent of Dharma, 216; Dharma Is Not Static, 218; Varna-Dharma or Organization of the Four Classes, 219; The Origin of Mixed Castes, 221; Initiation to
Studentship, 223; Marriage and Householder's Duties, 225; The
Position of Women, 227; The Hermit and the Ascetic, 228; The
Sacraments, 230
Chapter XI: Artha, The Second End of Man 231
Dharma As the Supreme Authority, 235; The Origin of Kingship,
236; The Science of Polity, 239; Duties of a King, 241; The Seven
Limbs of the State, 243; The Circle of States and Interstate Policy,
246; State Administration, 249
Chapter XII: Kama, The Third End of Man 253
The Man of Taste and Culture, 254
AESTHETIC SPECULATIONS ^55
Dramaturgy: Bharata's Treatise on Dramaturgy, 261
Poetics: Mammata's Illumination of Poetry, 265; The Ocean of Aes-
thetic Emotion, 268
Music: From a Brahmana, 268; From an Upanishad, 269; From a
Lawbook, 269; From the Puranas, 269; From a Tantra, 269; From a
Standard Music Treatise, 270; From the Songs of Tyagaraja, 270
Chapter XIII: Marsha, The Fourth End of Man 271
THE BHAGAVAD GITA 274
You Have to Fight, 278; Why Karma-Yoga? 281; The Technique of
Karma-Yoga, 283; The Doctrine of Devotion, 286; Divine Manifes-
tations, 287; Philosophical Synthesis, 291; The Ideal Man, 293
HINDU PHILOSOPHY 295
TSHVARAKRISHNA: The Sankhya Karikas, 303
SHANKARA: Commentary on the Vedanta Sutras, 310
THE WAY OF DEVOTION 322
The Teachers 327
NARADA: Aphorisms on Devotion, 327
KAPILA: The Purana of the Lord, 331
LOKACHARYA: The Triad of Categories, 337
Hymns' in Sanskrit 340 Devotion Alone Essential, 341; The Lord's Incarnation, 341; The
Lord's Name, 342; The Lord's Compassion, 342; Serving the Lord,
343; Laying All Burdens on the Lord and Surrendering to His Grace,
344
The Songs of the Saints of Medieval Hinduism 345
TIRUNAVUKKARASHU: 348
JNANASAMBANDHA, 348: The Lord's Names, 349; The Lord Is Every-
thing, 349
MANIKKAVACHAKAR; 349
SUNDARAMURTI; 349
POIHAI, BHftTAM, AND PEY: 350
NAMMALVAR: The Lord As Lover, 350; The God with Form and
Beyond Form, 351 PERIYALVAR OR VISHNUCHITTA : 351
TIRUMANGAIMANNAR: The Lord's Name Narayana, 351
BASAVARAJA: 352
PURANDARADASA: 352
JNANADEVA OR JNANESHVARA: 353
TUKARAM: 353
MIRABAI: 354
LALLA: 354
KABIR: 355
SURDAS: 357
TULASIDAS: Where the Lord Dwells, 358
SHANKARADEVA: 359
RAMAPRASAD: 359
An Anonymous Bhajan Song, 360
TYAGARAJA: 360
Islam in Medieval India 3^2
Chapter XIV: The Foundations of Medieval Islam 364
ISLAM AS REVEALED IN THE QUR JAN AND THE SUNNA 365
UNORTHODOX ISLAM 3^7
THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 37
The Corning of Islam to India 375
FUNDAMENTALS OF MUSLIM FAITH 37^
The Legacy of Al-Ghazall 383
Muslim Orthodoxy in India 3^5
Piety: The Key to Paradise, 386; Theology: The Perfection of Faith,
388; Propaganda: The Indian Proof, 393
[xvii]
The Shari'a or Holy Law of Islam 395 The Bases of Jurisprudence, 397; Guidance in the Holy Law, 400
Chapter XV: The Mystics 404
SUFISM IN INDIA DURING THE SULTANATE PERIOD 410 The Love of God, 411; Contemplation, 411; Seeking the Path, 413 Renunciation, 414
The Quest for God the Beloved and for Knowledge of God 415 Repentance, 415; The Steps of a Disciple, 415; The Final Stage, 417
The Preservation of God's Transcendence at the Supreme Stage of
Mystic Experience 417 Subsistence and Annihilation, 418; True Contemplation Is Ineffable,
422
Sufi Acceptance of Orthodox Formalist Islam 423 Orthodox Practice and Spiritual Experience Both Necessary, 423; The
Superiority of the Prophets Over the Saints, 425; The Morals of the
Heart, 426
Chapter XVI' Religious Tension Under the Mughals 429
AKBAR'S RELIGIOUS OUTLOOK 430 The Discussion in the Hall of Worship, 432; The Divine Faith, 436
DARA SHIKOH AND PANTHEISM 437 Data Shikoh and the Mystic Path, 438; The Upanishads: God's Most Perfect Revelation, 439
THE REACTION AGAINST PANTHEISTIC MYSTICISM 44! Mystic Union With God Is Only Subjective, 442; The Sharfa Is the True Religious Way, 444; Revelation and Inspiration Reconciled, 445; Against Rulers Misled by Wicked Ulama, 447
SHAH WALI-ULLAH 448
Legal Interpretation, 449; Shah Wall-Ullah and Mysticism, 453
Chapter XVII: The Muslim Ruler in India 455
The Final End of Human Society Is the Worhip of God, 458; Proph- ets and Kings, 459; Obedience to the Sultan Is Commanded by God,
462; Kingship Is Incompatible With Religious Ideals, 462; The War Between Good and Evil, 468; Man's Opposing Qualities and Their
"Political" Implications, 469; The Duties and Responsibilities of the
True King, 470; Justice Is Indispensable to Temporal Rulership, 483;
Rulership Is a Sacred Trust, 485; The Selection of Officials, 487; The
Importance of Consultation, 490; Organizing the Government, 491; The Army, 494; The Perfect Rule, 495; Abu'l Fazl's Theory of Ruler-
ship, 496; The Declaration of Akbar's Status As a Mujtahid, 499
Chapter XVIII: The Ideal Social Order 501
The Four-Class Division of Society, 503; Social Precedence, 505; Di-
vine Origin of the "Division of Labor," 506; Rulers to Preserve the
Social Order Willed by God, 508
Chapter XIX: The Importance of the Study of History 5 1 1
The Study of History As an Integral Support of the Orthodox Mus-
lim Conception of World Order, 513; Historical Literature in the
Service of Autocracy, 519
Indie Word List 521
Index 525
Map: India before 1200, page 37
[xix]
CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE
Brahmanism
PREHISTORIC PERIOD
B.C. .2700-1700 Indus Valley civilization and height of Harappa Culture,
c. 1500-1200 Aryan invasions of the Indian subcontinent; composition of
the earliest hymns of the Rig Veda.
VEDIC PERIOD
.1200-900 Composition of the Rig Veda.
.900 The great war depicted in the Mahabhdrata epic.
.900-500 Period of later Vedas, Brahmanas, and early Upanishads. c.8oo Aryans reach eastern Bihar and Bengal, c.6oo End of Brahmana period.
Jainism and Buddhism
B,C. 817 Traditional date of the birth of the Jain savior Parshva-
natha.
.563-483 [or, 558-478] Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha,
.542-490 Bimbisara, king of Magadha.
.490-458 Ajatashatru, king of Magadha.
.480 First Buddhist Council at Rajagriha.
.468 [or, 487, 477] Death of Vardhamana Mahavlra.
327-325 Invasion by Alexander of Macedon.
MAURYA PERIOD
.322-298 [or, 317-293] Chandragupta
.300 Megastheiies, Greek ambassador of Seleucus Nicator visits court of Chandragupta.
.298-273 Bindusara.
.273-237 [or, 269-232; 268-233] Ashoka.
.247-207 King Devanampiya Tissa of Ceylon converted to Bud- dhism by Thera Mahinda.
c.200-200 A.D. Period of greatest Buddhist and Jain influence in India.
.190 Greek Kingdoms in North-West India*
.185 [or, 183] End of dynasty*
AGE OF INVASIONS
A.D.
0.185-173 [or, 183-171] Shunga Dynasty. 0.185-149 Pushyamitra Shunga.
0.170-165 Yueh-chi (Iranians) invade India.
0.150 Milinda (Gk. Menander), greatest of Indo-Greek kings.
.90 Shakas invade North-West India.
c.early ist century Kushanas invade India.
0.79 [or, 82] Division of Jains into Shvetambara and Digambara sects.
.78-101 C.IOO-200
.200-400
.400-500
.454
,500-1000
.600-700
.700-800
.770-810
.900-1000
.1192
Hinduism
B.C. C.500-500 A.D.
.300
C.IOO-IOO A.D.
A.D. C.IOO-200
C.20O-40O
Kanishka.
Rise of Mahayana Buddhism. Ashvaghosha's Buddhaca-
nta. Prominence of Madhyamika School of Nagarjuna (until 5th century).
Kundakunda, Jain teacher of Digambara sect.
Mahayana philosophers Asanga and Vasubandhu. Found-
ing of great Buddhist monastery at Nalanda.
Writing of Jain oral tradition at Council at Valabhl in
Saurashtra.
Prominence of Mahayana Buddhist School of Yogachara or Vijnanavada,
Appearance of Tantricism in organized Buddhism.
Buddhism spreads to Nepal and Tibet.
Buddhist King Dharmapala rules in Bihar and Bengal.
Sahajayana or Sahajiya Tantric School marks last phase of Buddhism in India.
Muslim defeat of Hindus under Prithivi Raj. Buddhism
disappears as an organized religious force in India.
Period of Hindu lawbooks, epics, and development of the
six orthodox systems of philosophy.
Earliest core of Kautilya's Artha Sastra.
Composition of Bhagavad Gita.
Early law code of Yajnavalkya. Bharata's Treatise on Dramaturgy.
GUPTA PEB.IOD
.300-500
.300-888
Ishvarakrishna's Santyya Kansas. Christian community
of the Nestorian (Syrian) sect in existence at Cochin in
South India.
Pallava rulers of Kanchi in South India.
[ni]
0.319 [or 3*83 32o]~335 Chandragupta I.
0.335-376 Samudragupta.
0.376-415 Chandragupta II.
0400-500 Vatsyayana's Aphorisms on Love.
0.405 Fa-hsien, Chinese pilgrim arrives in Magadha.
0.454 First Huna invasion.
0.495 Second Huna invasion.
0.540 End of Gupta dynasty. c'55~753 [ r 757] Kingdom of Western Chalukyas in Deccan.
606-647 Ruk ^ King Harsha of Kanauj in North India.
0.629-645 Chinese pilgrim Hsiian-tsang visits India.
0.630-970 Eastern Chalukyas in Deccan.
MEDIEVAL INDIA
0.700-800 Tamil saint Mamkkavachakar in Mathurai. Dandin, San- skrit author and rhetorician.
0.760-1142 Palas of Bihar and Bengal.
0.788-820 Traditional dates of Shankara.
0.800-900 "Bhagavata Purana. Policy of SAufya. Jinasena's Great
Legend (Mahdpurdna). Sundaramurti, Shaiva Ndyandr of South India, Vamana and Anandavardhana, Hindu rhetoricians and aesthetic philosophers.
0.907-1310 [or, 0.850-1267] Chola Empire at Tanjore.
0.973-1189 Second Chalukya dynasty in Western and Central Dec-
can.
c.rooo-1100 Abhinavagupta. Yamuna Acharya's (Tamil Alavandar) Agamapramanya. Saraha's Dohatysa. Rise of Hindu Tantricism.
c.io 18-1055 King Bhoja of Malwa.
c.noo-1200 Mammata's KavyaprafySsa. Basavaraja founds Vlrashaiva
movement in South India.
0.1137 Death of Ramanuja*
0.1197-1276 [or, 1199-1278] Madhva Acharya.
0.1200-1300 Sharngadcva's treatise on music, Sangitaratnafyra. Lo-
kacharya's Triad of Categories,
1216-1327 Pandyas of Mathura.
0.1275-1296 Jnaneshvara's Jndnefoari.
0.1300-1400 Lalla, poetess of Kashmir.
1336-1565 Vijayanagara, last great Hindu kingdom in India.
0.1420 [or, 1550] Mira BIT, Rajput poetess.
1440-1518 Kabir.
Shankaradeva, Vaishnava saint of Assam.
c.1475 [or, 14791-1531 Vallabha, Vcdanta philosopher. .1480-1564 Purandaradasa, poet-saint of Karnataka.
0.1485-1533 Chaitanya of Bengal.
0.1500-1600 Surdas, blind poet of Agra. Vadiraja's Krsnastuti and
Haryasfafa. c. 1532-1623 Tulasi Das.
0.1542 St. Francis Xavier arrives in India.
0.1609-1649 [or, 1598-1649] Tukarama, Maharashtra poet-saint. 0.1700-1800 Baladeva, Vaishnava mystic in Bengal.
.1718-1775 Ramaprasad in Bengal,
.1767 [or, 17591-1847 Tyagaraja, saint-musician of South India.
Islam in Medieval India
.570-632 Life and mission of Muhammad the Prophet. 711-715 Conquest of Sind by the Arabs under Muhammad ibn Qasim. 962 Foundation of Turkish principality of Ghaznln.
988 Capture of Kabul by Sabuktigin of Ghaznln.
999-1026 Mahmud of Ghaznln raids India. 102 1 Foundation of Ghaznavid principality at Lahore.
1040 Battle of Dandanqan. Ghaznavids lose bulk of empire to Saljuqs. 1151 Burning of Ghaznln by Jahan-Suz. Rise of principality of Ghor. 1 186 Ghorids capture Lahore. End of Ghaznavid principality. 1192 Ghond defeat of Prithivi Raj. Delhi becomes Ghorid headquar-
ters in India.
DELHI SULTANATE
1211-1236 Reign of lltutmish, first founder-sultan of Delhi.
1266-1287 Reign of Balban, consolidator of Delhi sultanate.
1296-1316 Reign of Ala al-din KhaljI. Imperial phase of Delhi sultanate.
1306-1310 Conquest of South India by Delhi. Foundation of independent Bahmam sultanate in the Deccan.
1325-1351 Sultan Muhammad ibn Tughluq, patron of historian and political theorist Barni.
1351-1388 Reign of Delhi sultan, Flruz Shah Tughluq. End of imperial
phase of Delhi sultanate.
1398-1399 Tlmur's invasion of India and sack of Delhi. Rise of independent
"provincial" Muslim principalities. Probable birth of Kabir.
1451-1526 Lodi sultanate of Delhi.
1469 Birth of Guru Nanak, founder of Sikhism.
1504 Babur occupies Kabul.
[ xxiii ]
MUGHAL EMPIRE
1526 First battle of Panipat. Mughals displace Lodis as rulers of Delhi and Agra.
1540 Mughal ruler, Humayun, expelled from India by Sher Shah Sur.
1555 Humayun recovers Delhi.
1556 Accession of Akbar.
1569-1586 Mughal conquest of Chitor, Gujarat. Bengal, Kashmir.
1582 Promulgation of Din-i-Ilahi, Akbar J
s "Divine Faith."
io~oo Charter of incorporation granted to the East India Company. 1605-1627 Reign of Jahanglr.
1627-1658 Reign of Shah Jahan.
1651 Foundation of East India Company's factory at Hugli.
1657-1658 War of Succession between Dara Shikoh and Aurangzib. 1707 Birth of Shah Wali-Ullah. Death of Aurangzib.
1739 Sack of Delhi by Nadir Shah.
1757 Battle of Plassey.
[xxiv]
BRAHMANISM
Brahmanism, while not necessarily representing the most ancient religion of the Indian subcontinent, is that system of belief and ritual practice to
which Indians have, historically, looked back as the source of their re-
ligious traditions. Whether in later Hinduism, which tenaciously holds
to much of the Brahmanical tradition, or in Buddhism, which rejects much of it, there is presupposed this highly conscious and articulate cult, the central feature of a way of life made known through the ages by the earliest body of formal literature, the Veda.
As seen today, the earliest religious thought in India is known or de- duced from archaeological evidence, such as seals, figurines, tablets, and
other artifacts, belonging to a pre-Aryan civilization which existed in the
valley of the Indus River during the latter part of the third millennium
B.C. The only conclusions which may be drawn with any certainty, how-
ever, from materials associated with the culture uncovered at the site of
Harappa, are a preoccupation with fertility symbols (e.g., terra-cotta
figurines of pregnant females, stone phallic symbols, and the like) and
the worship of a divinity similar to the god Shiva, the ascetic par excel-
lence of historic Hinduism, who is frequently associated with a bull and
is also often represented by a phallic symbol. Besides representations of
fertility symbols, which imply the existence of a Mother or Earth Goddess
cult, and the divinity reminiscent of Shiva, the Indus civilization also
seemed to attach religious significance to certain animals, such as the
tiger, buffalo, crocodile, elephant, and even multiheaded monsters and
hybrid creatures, as well as trees and auspicious symbols, such as the
swastika. Some seals point to religious motifs found in Mesopotamia, such as the Gilgamesh legend, the ibex, trefoil designs, and others, and
suggest a possible origin of religious ideas even earlier than the datable
artifacts of the Indus Valley civilization. Though it is difficult to establish
a definite continuity in the development of religious ideas in India dating
from the Indus civilization to modern times, it is, however, possible to
distinguish a clearly non-Aryan which may or may not be pre-Aryan source for many of the concepts which characterize that religion which
is known as "Hinduism' 1
in India today.
A second, and perhaps somewhat more significant, source of Indian reli- gious ideas was introduced by the Aryans who invaded India from the
northwest about 1500 B.C., or earlier, and who may themselves have been
responsible for the destruction of the Indus civilization. These Aryan invaders brought with them religious concepts consisting mainly of a
pantheon of naturalistic or functional gods, a ritualistic cult involving
the sacrificial use of fire and an exhilarating drink called soma, as well as
the rudiments of a social order. To a certain extent their religion derived from primitive Indo-European times; that is to say, some of the gods mentioned in the scriptures of these people are found to have mythological
counterparts in other Indo-European traditions, particularly those of
Iran, Greece, and Rome, and thus indicate a common origin of such gods in antiquity. In addition to such specifically Indo-European concepts, the
religion of the Aryans involved other ideas which may have developed in the course of their eastward migrations or may have resulted from the assimilation of indigenous religious notions encountered in the Indian
subcontinent itself, From a sociological standpoint, the religion intro-
duced by the Aryan invaders was limited to persons of Aryan birth,
though some non-Aryan beliefs seem to have been accepted in a modified
form or at least tolerated by the priesthood of the conquering Aryans. The religion thus developed by the Aryans from the time of their
invasion of India until roughly 500 B.C. was embodied in a collection of
hymns, ritual texts, and philosophical treatises, called the Veda. From
Aryan times down to the present, Hindus have regarded the Veda as a
body of eternal and revealed scripture. Its final authority is accepted to
some extent by all Hindus as embodying the essential truths of Hinduism.
The earliest portion of the Veda consists of four metrical hymnals, known as Samhitas, being the Rig Veda, Yajur Vedat Sdma Vedat and Aiharva
Veda. The earliest of these texts is that of the Rig Veda, and it is this col- lection of hymns (re) which constitutes the earliest source of knowledge
concerning the Aryan religion. The most recent of these canonical collec- tions is the Atharva Veda, which is somewhat more representative of the
popular religion of Vedic times than are the other Vedas, which are more
sacerdotal in character* The metrical hymns and chants of these texts gave
rise to elaborate ritualistic prose interpretations called Brdhmanas and
Aranyafos ("forest books"). Toward the end of the Vedic period, the earlier emphasis on ritual was translated symbolically. Thus, Vedic ideas
of sacrifice and mythology were reinterpreted in terms of the macrocosm
and microcosm. Cosmological inquiries of some of the later hymns of the
Rig Veda were extended and an investigation of the human soul was undertaken. The speculations and interpretations along these lines were formulated by various philosophical schools in treatises collectively called
Upanishads. Thus, the whole of Vedic literature consists of four Vedas
or Samhitas, several expository ritual texts attached to each of these Vedas
called Brahmanas, and speculative treatises, or Upanishads, concerned
chiefly with a mystical interpretation of the Vedic ritual and its relation
to man and the universe.
Although the relationship between the various deities of the Rig Veda
is not always clear, and different deities often personifications of natural
forces may each in turn be regarded as the supreme god, nevertheless Indra (often referred to as c\a deva "One God") stands out as pre-eminent and the core myth of the Rig Veda recounts his deeds. In terms of this
central myth, creation proceeded when Indra, the champion of the celestial
gods, slew a serpent demon, Vritra, who enclosed the waters and the sun
requisite for human life. When Indra split open the belly of this demon the essentials of creation moisture, heat, light were released and cosmic
order (rita) was established under the administration of the god Varuna.
Gods and men then had specific functions (yrata) to perform in accordance with this cosmic order. After death those individuals who had fulfilled
their obligations under the cosmic order went to a heavenly realm presided
over by Yama, the first mortal. Two mythical dogs guarded the righteous on the path to this region, but the sinful were fettered and, unprotected, fell prey to various demons.
Cult practices developed an elaborate ritual based on a fire sacrifice,
personified as the god Agni, and included various oblations of clarified
butter and the production of the soma juice, deified as the god Soma,
from an unidentified plant known also from Iranian sources. This ritual
naturally necessitated a highly specialized priesthood. Just as the crack-
ling of the sacrificial fire was viewed as the voice of Agni, the priest
par excellence, so, too, great significance was attached to the chanting of
hymns and invocations by the human priesthood. Later the sacrifice itself
[3]
was viewed cosmologically and the correct performance of the sacrifice pos- sessed a magical potency which could coerce even the gods. This magical
power inherent in the sacrificial prayers thus developed into spells, called
br&hman. He who recited them was a "pray-er" (brahman), or one related to prayer (brdhmana). From this concept developed the brahman, or
priestly, caste.
The spiritualization o prayer (brahman) and its relation to the gods and the universe through ritual sacrifice constitute the central conception of this early phase of Indian religious thought. When the Upanishads coupled this notion with an investigation of the individual self (atman)
an idea closely allied to the earlier personification and deification of
"Wind" or "Air" (Vayu) and referring to human "breath" the brahman
came to be viewed as a universal principle. Thus, an essential feature of
Vedic ritual, the "prayer" itself, was given cosmological and cosmogonic
implications and became the principal subject of later Indian philosophical
inquiry. It is on the basis of these ritualistic Vedic concepts that the ear-
liest definable religious thought of India is identified as Brahmanism.
R. WEILER
r .
e
CHAPTER I
THE COSMIC ORDER IN THE VEDIC HYMNS
Long before they entered into India the Vedic Aryans must have started
producing prayers and songs (mantras) relating to their religion. The character of this religion was determined by the kind of life they had
been living. At that early stage of their cultural history, the Vedic Aryans lived close to nature as a part of it, rather than apart from it. It was,
therefore, the vastness and brilliance of nature, its blessings and maledic-
tions, and, above all, the inexorable and subtly operating law which
regulated all its manifestations, that dominated their religious ideology. The earliest hymns of the Vedic Aryans, accordingly, pertained to this cosmic religion, to which they gave expression through such mythological
concepts as those of the divine parents, Heaven and Earth, the cosmic law
(rita), and the sustainer of that law, Varuna. Side by side with this cosmic
religion, the Vedic Aryans had also developed a kind of fire worship. The cosmic religion of the Vedic Aryans tended toward anthropo- morphism, but it was not idolatrous. Fke was, therefore, regarded as the
liaison between gods and men.
Sun worship, which also figures prominently in the Veda, is, in a
sense, just an aspect of fire worship; but it has greatly influenced many
mythological concepts in the Veda with the result that divinities like
Vishnu, who had originally little to do with the solar phenomenon, came
to be regarded as sun-gods at some stage in the evolution of their
character.
In the course of time there occurred a change in the conditions of life
of the Vedic Aryans and consequently in their religious ideology. They set out toward India on campaigns of conquest and colonization, fought
on their way a series of battles with several antagonistic tribes, whom
they collectively called Dasas, and finally emerged as victorious colonizers
of that part of India which was known as the land of seven rivers, the
[5]
present Punjab* In this epoch-making warlike enterprise the Vedic Aryans were apparently led by their heroic leader, Indra, whom they soon made into a god. Gradually history came to be transformed into mythology. In this process several elements were derived from an ancient primitive
myth of the Hero and the Dragon. And later the Vedic Aryan war-god came to be invested with a cosmic character. This hero-religion even-
tually dominated the hymns produced by the Vedic poets, priests, and
warriors.
Perhaps with a view to counteracting the growing influence of a
mythology glorifying military prowess, the Vedic poets and priests deified
the magical potency of their prayers and priestcraft in the forms of
Brahmanaspati (Lord of Prayer), who is in some respects modeled after
Indra, and Vach, the goddess of Speech or Holy Word. He embodies prayer (brahman) itself, as well as ritual activity in general. Moreover, in the
person of Brahmanaspati ritual and cosmological aspects are blended. He is often associated frith Agni, the sacrifice personified, on the one hand,
and Indra, the later cosmogonic principal (tad efom), on the other. Thus
the hymns dedicated to this god represent the emergence of prayer (brah-
man) as an extremely significant concept in early Vedic thought. It is not
at all surprising then that the importance of ritual in Vedic religion should
give rise to the central conception of later Vedic philosophical speculation
regarding the true nature of the cosmological concept brahman and its re-
lation to the human self.
Like many other primitive communities, the Vedic Aryans believed that the creation of the universe and the procreation of the human race were the result of a primeval sacrifice, namely of the self-immolation of a cosmic
being. This cosmic being is represented in the Veda as the male, Purusha,
Apart from this concept of the primeval cosmic sacrifice as the starting
point of creation, there are represented in the Veda other significant cur-
rents of cosmogonic thought- According to one of them the source of all
powers and existences, divine as well as earthly, was conceived as the
"golden germ" (hiranyagarbha) a form assumed by an unnamed Ur-god. This "golden germ" is the precursor of the universal egg (brahma^a) of
the later cosmogony. Another cosmogonic theory is far more profound. It
seeks to controvert the view that the world has evolved out of "nonbeing"
(asat) . At the same time this theory asserts that the source of this world can-
not be, strictly speaking, characterized as "being" (sat). In the beginning there was neither "nonbeing" nor "being," nevertheless That One (tad c\am) breathed, though breathless, through its own inherent power. Be- sides it nothing existed. This idea may suggest the mythological creation of the world by Indra, the One God (e\a deva), who destroyed the cosmic demon Vritra. Finally, in the Atharva Veda both "being" and "nonbeing" have brahman as their source.
Side by side with the ritual, eschatology, mythology, and cosmogony of the upper classes among the Vedic Aryans there had also existed a
religion o the non-Aryan subject peoples. This religion comprised a variety of charms, imprecations, and exorcistic practices which were primarily intended "to appease, to bless, and to curse." The motif recurring through- out this religion was, of course, magic,
Agni
The discovery of fire constitutes a significant landmark in the history of hu- man civilization and it is not unnatural that fire should have been held in
great awe from early times. The Aryans, however, developed the worship of
Agni or Fire to an extraordinary degree. The god Agni is the personification and deification especially of the sacri-
ficial fire. He is the priest of the gods and the god of the priests. In the Rig Veda he is second only to Indra in prominence. He has three forms: terrestrial as fire, atmospheric as lightning, and celestial as the sun. Thus, his function as
the sacrificial fire of the priests serves as a kind of liaison between man and the
heavenly gods specifically he carries the oblations which the brahman priests
pour into the fire to the gods. The correct propitiation of Agni in the Vedic ritual was thus of considerable importance to Aryan man.
[From Rig Veda, i.i]
I extol Agni, the household priest, the divine minister of the sacrifice,
the chief priest, the bestower of blessings.
May that Agni, who is to be extoled by ancient and modern seers, con- duct the gods here.
Through Agni may one gain day by day wealth and welfare which is
glorious and replete with heroic sons.
O Agni, the sacrifice and ritual which you encompass on every side, that indeed goes to the gods.
May Agni, the chief priest, who possesses the insight of a sage, who
[7]
is truthful, widely renowned, and divine, come here with the gods. O Agni, O Angiras ["messenger"], whatever prosperity you bring to
the pious is indeed in accordance with your true function.
O Agni, illuminator o darkness, day by day we approach you with holy thought bringing homage to you,
Presiding at ritual functions, the brightly shining custodian of the cos-
mic order (rita), thriving in your own realm, O Agni, be easy of access to us as a father to his son. Join us for our
wellbeing.
Heaven and Earth
As the divine parents, Heaven and Earth are symbolic of the vastness, bright- ness, and bounty of nature. The myth of their conjugal union dates from primi- tive Indo-European times and probably represents the earliest Vedic concep- tion of creation based on an indissoluble connection of the two worlds, celestial
and terrestrial.
Note the constant emphasis in these prayers on the hope of obtaining material
rewards.
[From Rig Veda, 6.70]
Rich in ghee [i.e., clarified butter considered as fertilizing rain], exceed-
ingly glorious among beings, wide, broad, honey-dispensing, with beau-
tiful forms, Heaven and Earth are, in accordance with Varuna's cosmic
law (dharma), held asunder, both ageless and rich in seed.