( Public Domain ) A Peek into Daily Life in the Vedic PeriodĪbout 20 percent of this text (equivalent to about 1200 verses) is found to overlap with the Rig Veda. Examples include the ‘Hymn to goddess Earth’, and the ‘Glorification of the sun, or the primeval principle, as a Brahman disciple’.Ī steel engraving from the 1850s, which depicts the creative activities of Prajapati, a Vedic deity who presides over procreation and protection of life. The third category of hymns pertain higher matters, such as the nature of the Supreme Being, immortality, and time. Examples of hymns that fall in this category include charms for a woman to obtain a husband, a charm to promote virility (incidentally, there is also a charm to deprive a man of his virility), and a charm to secure perfect health. The second category consists of hymns related to everyday life, such as health, wealth, friendship, and marriage. Ancient Text Prescribing Ways to Conceive a Baby Boy Included in New University Textbook in India.Ayurvedic Medicine: A Traditional Knowledge of Life from India that Has Endured the Passage of Time.Speakers at Science Congress says ancient India mastered advanced space flight thousands of years ago.Furthermore, there are charms meant to protect a person against malicious adversaries, such as sorcerers, and ‘enemies thwarting holy work’. These include charms against possession by demons of disease, and charms for driving away demons. There are also charms that were meant to combat spiritual, rather than physical illnesses. The first of these related to the curing of diseases, and the destruction of adverse forces.įor example, in Book I, there are several charms against fever, a few charms against poison, and charms against worms (for oneself / for one’s cattle / for one’s children). These may be divided into three main categories. The Atharva Veda has been described as the ‘Veda of varied knowledge’, as it deals with numerous subject matters.
( Public Domain ) The Nature of the Atharva Veda Mantras It may be noted, however, that a small number of hymns, estimated to be about a sixth of the entire Atharva Veda, were written in prose.Ĭodex Cashmiriensis folio 187a from Atharva-Veda Saṁhitā second half, by William Dwight Whitney and Charles Rockwell Lanman. In total, the Atharva Veda has about 6000 mantras (meaning ‘verses’), most of which are metrical. The Atharva Veda is divided into 20 kandas (equivalent to books), which contains a total of 730 suktas (meaning ‘hymns’). Compared to the other Vedas, the Atharva Veda was composed at a later date, perhaps as late as 500 BC. The Atharva Veda is also known as the Atharvangirasa Veda, which attributes this sacred text to Atharvan and Angira, another Hindu sage. Additionally, some have claimed that Atharvan means ‘fire priest’. Atharvan is called one of the Saptarishi, or seven seers, and is believed to have instituted the fire sacrifice. The Atharva Veda is named after the legendary Vedic sage Atharvan, who is believed to have ‘heard’ this Veda, and then had it written down. Saraswati: Hindu Goddess of Aesthetics and Protector of the Universe.The Anu and Ancient Seers in the Rig Veda.The Vedas: Ancient Mystical Texts Offer Charms, Incantations, Mythological Accounts and Formulas for Enlightenment.Nevertheless, compared to the other three Vedas, the Atharva Veda seems to represent ‘popular religion’, as its charms and incantations are more folkloric in nature. The Atharva Veda itself has been translated to mean the ‘Veda of Magic Formulas’, though not all scholars agree with this translation. The Vedas may be considered as knowledge texts (the word ‘veda’ itself has been translated to mean ‘knowledge’), and, generally speaking, there is a strong priestly bias to them, as the Brahmins monopolized the production and the transmission of these texts. The Vedas are the sacred scriptures of Hinduism and are believed to have been composed in India between 1500 BC and the end of the 1st millennium BC. The Atharva Veda is one of the four Vedas, the other three being the Rig Veda, the Sama Veda, and the Yajur Veda. We know, O Sleep, thy birth, thou art the son of the divine women-folk, the instrument of Yama (death)! Thou art the ender, thou art death! Thus do we know thee, O Sleep: do thou, O Sleep, protect us from evil dreams! As one pays off a sixteenth, an eighth, or an (entire) debt, thus do we transfer every evil dream upon our enemy. Thou who art neither alive nor dead, the immortal child of the gods art thou, O Sleep! Varunânî is thy mother, Yama (death) thy father, Araru is thy name.