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Ayodhya (Ramayana)

Ayodhya is a legendary city mentioned in the ancient Sanskrit-language texts, including the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. These texts describe it as the capital of the Ikshvaku kings, including Rama.[1]

Gold carving depiction of the legendary Ayodhya at the Ajmer Jain temple

The historicity of this legendary city is of concern to the Ayodhya dispute. According to one theory, it is same as the present-day Ayodhya city. According to another theory, it is a fictional city, and the present-day Ayodhya (originally called Saketa) was renamed after it around the 4th or 5th century, during the Gupta period.[2][3]

Legendary depictions edit

According to the Ramayana, Ayodhya was founded by Manu, the progenitor of mankind, and measured 12x3 yojanas in area.[4] Both the Ramayana and the Mahabharata describe Ayodhya as the capital of the Ikshvaku dynasty of Kosala, including Rama and Dasharatha. The Purana-pancha-lakshana also describes the city as the capital of Ikshvaku kings, including Harishchandra.[1]

The Ramayana states that the city was ruled by king Dasharatha, a descendant of king Ikshvaku. His son Rama was exiled to the forest, and returned to the city after several travails, establishing an ideal rule in the kingdom. According to Uttara Kanda, a later addition to the Ramayana, Rama divided the kingdom into North and South Kosala at the end of his reign, with respective capitals at Shravasti and Kushavati, and installed his two sons (Lava and Kusha) to rule them.[5] Rama himself entered the waters of the Sarayu river, along with all the inhabitants of the city, and ascended to heaven. The location where they ascended is Gopratara Tirtha, according to the Mahabharata.[6] Ayodhya was subsequently repopulated by king Rishabha.[1]

Several other literary works based on the story of Rama also mention Ayodhya. These include the Abhisheka and Pratimanataka by the poet Bhāsa (dated 2nd century CE or earlier), and the Raghuvamsha of Kalidasa (c. 5th century CE).[7]

According to the Jain tradition, five tirthankaras were born at Ayodhya, including Rishabhanatha, Ajitanatha, Abhinandananatha, Sumatinatha, and Anantanatha.[8]

Historicity edit

Identification with present-day Ayodhya edit

Many modern scholars, including B. B. Lal and H. D. Sankalia, have identified the legendary Ayodhya with the present-day Ayodhya town, but this theory is not universally accepted.[9]

Arguments cited in favour of this identification include:

  • Several ancient texts, including the Ramayana, the Bhagavata Purana, and the Padma Purana, mention that the legendary Ayodhya was located on the banks of the Sarayu river, just like the modern Ayodhya.[10]
  • The Gupta-era texts, such as Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha and the Brahmanda Purana use "Ayodhya" as another name for Saketa, which was the ancient name of present-day Ayodhya. This identification also occurs in the later Sanskrit texts, including Hemachandra's Abhidhana-Chintamani and Yashodhara's commentary on Kamasutra.[1]
  • Several ancient texts, including the Vishnu Smriti and the Matsya Purana mention Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage (tirtha). The 1092 CE Chandrawati inscription of the Gahadavala king Chandradeva mentions that he took bath on the Svarga-dvara tirtha situated on the confluence of the Sarayau and the Ghaghra rivers at Ayodhya.[11]
  • The epics describe the legendary Ayodhya as the capital of Kosala. A 1st century BCE inscription issued by Dhanadeva, who describes himself as the lord of Kosala, has been found at present-day Ayodhya.[12] Several later inscriptions also mention the city of Ayodhya.[11]

Identification as a legendary city edit

A section of scholars have argued that the legendary Ayodhya of Ramayana is a purely mythical city, and is not same as the present-day Ayodhya.[2] These scholars include M. C. Joshi, Hans T. Bakker,[13] and a group of 25 historians from the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), among others.[2] According to these scholars, the process of identifying the legendary Ayodhya with Saketa (an ancient name of present-day Ayodhya) began in the early centuries CE, and was completed during the Gupta period.[14]

The various arguments made in favour of identifying the legendary Ayodhya as a fictional city include the following:

Lack of archaeological evidence edit

The JNU historians argue that according to the archaeological evidence, the earliest possible settlements at Ayodhya can be dated to c. 8th century BCE, while the Ramayana is set much earlier. The Ramayana depicts Ayodhya as an urban centre with palaces and buildings, while the excavations at present-day Ayodhya indicate a primitive life.[15]

Hans T. Bakker notes that no place called Ayodhya is attested by any epigraphic or other archaeological evidence before the 2nd century CE.[16] The earliest extant inscriptions mentioning a place called Ayodhya are from the Gupta period. For example, a 436 CE inscription describes a donation to Brahmins hailing from Ayodhya. A 533–534 CE inscription mentions a nobleman from Ayodhya. The Gaya inscription, said to be issued by Samudragupta (4th century CE), but possibly an 8th century fabrication according to modern historians, describes Ayodhya as a garrison town.[17]

Lack of ancient literary evidence edit

Early Buddhist and Jain texts mention Shravasti and Saketa, not Ayodhya, as the major cities of the Kosala region. The later texts such as the Puranas, which mention Ayodhya as the capital of Kosala, simply follow the legendary Ramayana.[15]

According to Hans T. Bakker's analysis, the Sanskrit sources that mention Ayodhya but not Saketa are predominantly fictional in nature: these texts include Mahabharata, Ramayana, and Purana-pancha-lakshana. On the other hand, the Sanskrit sources that mention Saketa but not Ayodhya are of "semi-scientific or factual nature".[18] The Buddhist Pali-language texts name a city called Ayojjha or Ayujjha (Pali for Ayodhya), but suggest that it was located on the banks of the Ganges river (see below).[19] In the early Jain canonical literature, "Aujjha" (a Prakrit form of "Ayodhya") is mentioned only once: the Thana Sutta describes it as the capital of Gandhilavati, a district of the "largely mythological" Mahavideha country.[20] This indicates that the Ayodhya of Sanskrit epic literature is a fictional city.[18]

Among the Sanskrit sources, the identification of Ayodhya with Saketa first appears in texts from the Gupta period, including the Brahmanda Purana and Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha.[17] The Jain text Paumachariya (dated before 4th century CE) first incorporates the Rama legend into Jain mythology. During this period, the Jains linked the mythology of the Ikshvaku dynasty with their tirthankaras and chakravartins. For example, the first tirthankara Rishabha is said to have been born in Ikkhagabhumi (according to Kalpasutra) or Viniya (according to Jambu-dvipa-prajnapati), which are identified as Ayodhya (Aojhha) or Saketa.[21] In the 19th century, Alexander Cunningham of Archaeological Survey of India believed that Ramayana also identifies Ayodhya with a Saketa, based on a verse that supposedly describes Dasharatha as the king of "Saketa-nagara". However, this verse was fabricated by a Brahmin of Lucknow: it is not found in the original Ramayana text.[22]

Local Vikramaditya legend edit

A local oral tradition of Ayodhya, first recorded in writing by Robert Montgomery Martin in 1838,[23] mentions that the city was deserted after the death of Rama's descendant Brihadbala. It remained deserted for several centuries until King Vikrama (or Vikramaditya) of Ujjain came searching for it.[23] On the advice of a sage, Vikrama determined that the site of ancient Ayodhya as the place where the milk would flow from the udder of a calf.[15] He cut down the forests that had covered the ancient ruins, established a new city, erected the Ramgar fort, and built 360 temples.[23]

According to the JNU historians, this myth of "re-discovery" seems to recognize that modern Ayodhya is not same as the ancient Ayodhya, and appears to be an attempt to impart the modern town a religious sanctity that it originally lacked.[15] These historians theorize that the 5th century emperor Skandagupta (who adopted the title Vikramditya) moved his residence to Saketa, and renamed it to Ayodhya, probably to associate himself with the legendary solar dynasty.[15] According to Bakker, the Guptas moved their capital to Saketa either during the reign of Kumaragupta I or Skandagupta, and this event is possibly alluded to in the Raghuvamsha.[17]

Kishore Kunal argues that there is no historical evidence to support the theory that Saketa was renamed as "Ayodhya" by Skandagupta. He notes that the Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha clearly refers to the same city by the names "Saketa" and "Ayodhya", while narrating the legend of Rama.[24] Historian Gyanendra Pandey argues that Kalidasa's mention of "Saketa" and "Ayodhya" do not prove any connection between the legendary Ayodhya and the present-day Ayodhya, as he lived in the Gupta period (c. 5th century CE), presumably after the Guptas had changed the name of Saketa to "Ayodhya".[25]

Relatively recent association with Rama edit

The rise of the modern Ayodhya town as a centre of Rama worship is relatively recent, dating back to the 13th century, when the Ramanandi sect started gaining prominence. Several inscriptions dated between 5th and 8th centuries mention the town, but do not mention its association with Rama. The writings of Xuanzang (c. 602–664 CE) associate the town with Buddhism. It has also been an important Jain pilgrimage centre, and an ancient Jain figure (dated 4th-3rd century BCE) has been found here. The 11th century texts refer to Gopataru tirtha in Ayodhya, but do not refer to the birthplace of Rama.[15]

Bakker notes that the legend of Rama was not always connected with Ayodhya: for example, the Buddhist Dasaratha-jataka mentions Varanasi, not Ayodhya, as the capital of Dasharatha and Rama. Thus, the association of Rama with Ayodhya may be a result the claim that he was a member of the Ikshvaku family, and this family's association with Ayodhya.[18]

Analysis of Ramayana edit

According to M. C. Joshi, "a critical examination of the geographical data available in Valmiki's narratives does not justify the commonly accepted identification of the ancient city with the modern one". For example, in the Ayodhya Kanda of the Ramayana, Bharata takes a geographically "non-sensical" route while traveling to Ayodhya from the kingdom of his uncle Kekeya (located in the extreme west of the Indian subcontinent). During this journey, he passes through places located in present-day Odisha and Assam.[13]

Location on the banks of the Ganges edit

According to Hans T. Bakker, the older parts of Mahabharata and Purana-pancha-lakshana mention Ayodhya as the capital of the Ikshvaku kings, but do not state that it was situated on the banks of the Sarayu river. The older parts of Ramayana only suggest that it was located in the vicinity of the Sarayu river. For example, Ramayana 2.70.19 states that the funeral processions of Dasharatha traveled from the city to Sarayu using palanquins and chariots, which according to Bakker, suggests that Sarayu was located at some distance from the city.[18] According to Bakker, only the newer (5th century and later) parts of Ramayana explicitly describe Ayodhya as located on the banks of the Sarayu river.[26]

The JNU historians agree that an ancient historical city called "Ayodhya" (Pali: Ayojjha or Ayujjha[19]) existed, but argue that it was not same as the modern Ayodhya, or the legendary city described in the Ramayana. This theory is based on the fact that according to the ancient Buddhist texts, the ancient Ayodhya town was located on the banks of the river Ganga (Ganges), not Sarayu. For example, the Samyutta Nikaya states "Once Lord Buddha was walking in Ayodhya on the bank of the Ganga river".[27] Buddhaghosha's commentary on the Samyutta Nikaya mentions that the citizens of Ayodhya (Ayujjha-pura) built a vihara for the Buddha "in a curve of the river Ganga".[19]

Kishore Kunal argues that the word "Ganga" is also used as common noun for a holy river in Sanskrit.[27] In his support, he presents another verse from Samyutta Nikaya (4.35.241.205), which states "Once Lord Buddha was walking in Kaushambi on the bank of the Ganga river". The ancient city of Kaushambi was actually located on the banks of the river Yamuna, not Ganga.[28] S. N. Arya similarly points out that the 7th century Chinese Buddhist traveler Xuanzang states that he reached Ayodhya ("A-yu-te") after crossing the Ganga river, while traveling southwards (Ayodhya is actually located to the north of the Ganges river). Xuanzang seems to have used the term Ganga to describe "a long affluent of the great river".[29]

Taittiriya Aranyaka and Atharvaveda description edit

M. C. Joshi asserted that Ayodhya is mentioned in a Taittiriya Aranyaka verse, which is also found with some variations in the Atharvaveda:[30]

Joshi argues that the Ayodhya city, as described in the Taittiriya Aranyaka (and Atharvaveda), is obviously a mythical city, because it is said to be surrounded by a pool of nectar, and is described as the location of "the golden treasure-dome of the celestial world". According to Joshi, this Ayodhya is similar to the mythical places such as Samavasarana and Nandishvaradvipa, which appear in the Jain mythology.[31]

According to other scholars, such as B. B. Lal, the word ayodhya in this context is not a proper noun (the name of a city), but an adjective, meaning "impregnable".[32] The verse describes the human body (pur) as having eight chakras and nine orifices:[33]

Lal points out that two cognate forms ayodhyena and ayodhyaḥ appear in Atharvaveda 19.13.3 and 19.13.7 respectively, in similar sense of "invincible". The 14th century commentator Sayana also confirms this meaning of the word.[34] the later text Bhagavad Gita also describes the human body as a city with nine doors, in which the soul resides. This confirms that the Atharvaveda uses "ayodhya" as an adjective, not as the name of a city.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 7.
  2. ^ a b c Sarvepalli Gopal et al. 1995, p. 76.
  3. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1982, p. 103–126.
  4. ^ K. D. Bajpai 1967, p. 42.
  5. ^ Meenakshi Jain 2013, p. 91.
  6. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1982, p. 103–104.
  7. ^ Kishore Kunal 2016, pp. 8–9.
  8. ^ Paras Kumar Choudhary 2004.
  9. ^ Herman Paul 2015, pp. 113–114.
  10. ^ S. N. Arya 1990, p. 44.
  11. ^ a b c S. N. Arya 1990, p. 46.
  12. ^ S. N. Arya 1990, p. 45.
  13. ^ a b Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 10.
  14. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1984, pp. 11–12.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Sarvepalli Gopal et al. 1995, pp. 76–81.
  16. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 9, 11.
  17. ^ a b c Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 12.
  18. ^ a b c d Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 9.
  19. ^ a b c Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 5.
  20. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 3.
  21. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 11.
  22. ^ Kishore Kunal 2016, pp. 9–10.
  23. ^ a b c Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 30.
  24. ^ Kishore Kunal 2016, p. 9.
  25. ^ Gyanendra Pandey 2006, p. 97.
  26. ^ Hans T. Bakker 1984, p. 7, 10.
  27. ^ a b Kishore Kunal 2016, p. 6.
  28. ^ Kishore Kunal 2016, pp. 5–6.
  29. ^ S. N. Arya 1990, pp. 44–45.
  30. ^ B. B. Lal 1978–79, pp. 46–47.
  31. ^ a b B. B. Lal 1978–79, p. 46.
  32. ^ a b B. B. Lal 1978–79, p. 47.
  33. ^ B. B. Lal 1978–79, pp. 47–48.
  34. ^ B. B. Lal 1978–79, p. 48.

Bibliography edit

  • B. B. Lal (1978–79). K. N. Dikshit (ed.). "Was Ayodhyā a mythical city?". Purātattva (10). Indian Archaeological Society.
  • Gopal, Sarvepalli; Thapar, Romila; Chandra, Bipan; Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi; Jaiswal, Suvira; Mukhia, Harbans; Panikkar, K. N.; Champakalakshmi, R.; Saberwal, Satish; Chattopadhyaya, B. D.; Verma, R. N.; Meenakshi, K.; Alam, Muzaffar; Singh, Dilbagh; Mukherjee, Mridula; Palat, Madhavan; Mukherjee, Aditya; Ratnagar, S. F.; Bhattacharya, Neeladri; Trivedi, K. K.; Sharma, Yogesh; Chakravarti, Kunal; Josh, Bhagwan; Gurukkal, Rajan; Ray, Himanshu (1990). "The Political Abuse of History: Babri Masjid-Rama Janmabhumi Dispute". Social Scientist. 18 (1/2): 76–81. doi:10.2307/3517330. JSTOR 3517330.
  • Hans T. Bakker (1984). Ayodhya. Institute of Indian Studies, University of Groningen. OCLC 769116023.
  • Hans T. Bakker (1982). "The rise of Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage". Indo-Iranian Journal. 24 (2): 103–126. doi:10.1163/000000082790081267. S2CID 161957449.
  • Herman Paul (2015). Key Issues in Historical Theory. Routledge. ISBN 9-781-31751-945-4.
  • K. D. Bajpai (1967). The Geographical Encyclopaedia of Ancient and Medieval India: Based on Vedic, Puranic, Tantric, Jain, Buddhistic Literature and Historical Records. Indic Academy.
  • Kishore Kunal (2016). Ayodhya Revisited. Ocean Books. ISBN 978-81-8430-357-5.
  • Meenakshi Jain (2013). Rama and Ayodhya. New Delhi: Aryan Books. ISBN 978-8173054518.
  • Gyanendra Pandey (2006). Routine Violence. Stanford University Press.
  • Paras Kumar Choudhary (2004). Sociology of Pilgrims. Kalpaz Publications. ISBN 978-81-7835-243-5.
  • S. N. Arya (1990). "Historicity of Ayodhya". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 51. Indian History Congress: 44–48. JSTOR 44148186.

ayodhya, ramayana, city, modern, india, named, ayodhya, ayodhya, ayodhya, legendary, city, mentioned, ancient, sanskrit, language, texts, including, ramayana, mahabharata, these, texts, describe, capital, ikshvaku, kings, including, rama, gold, carving, depict. For the city of modern India named Ayodhya see Ayodhya Ayodhya is a legendary city mentioned in the ancient Sanskrit language texts including the Ramayana and the Mahabharata These texts describe it as the capital of the Ikshvaku kings including Rama 1 Gold carving depiction of the legendary Ayodhya at the Ajmer Jain temple The historicity of this legendary city is of concern to the Ayodhya dispute According to one theory it is same as the present day Ayodhya city According to another theory it is a fictional city and the present day Ayodhya originally called Saketa was renamed after it around the 4th or 5th century during the Gupta period 2 3 Contents 1 Legendary depictions 2 Historicity 2 1 Identification with present day Ayodhya 2 2 Identification as a legendary city 2 2 1 Lack of archaeological evidence 2 2 2 Lack of ancient literary evidence 2 2 3 Local Vikramaditya legend 2 2 4 Relatively recent association with Rama 2 2 5 Analysis of Ramayana 2 2 6 Location on the banks of the Ganges 2 2 7 Taittiriya Aranyaka and Atharvaveda description 3 References 3 1 BibliographyLegendary depictions editAccording to the Ramayana Ayodhya was founded by Manu the progenitor of mankind and measured 12x3 yojanas in area 4 Both the Ramayana and the Mahabharata describe Ayodhya as the capital of the Ikshvaku dynasty of Kosala including Rama and Dasharatha The Purana pancha lakshana also describes the city as the capital of Ikshvaku kings including Harishchandra 1 The Ramayana states that the city was ruled by king Dasharatha a descendant of king Ikshvaku His son Rama was exiled to the forest and returned to the city after several travails establishing an ideal rule in the kingdom According to Uttara Kanda a later addition to the Ramayana Rama divided the kingdom into North and South Kosala at the end of his reign with respective capitals at Shravasti and Kushavati and installed his two sons Lava and Kusha to rule them 5 Rama himself entered the waters of the Sarayu river along with all the inhabitants of the city and ascended to heaven The location where they ascended is Gopratara Tirtha according to the Mahabharata 6 Ayodhya was subsequently repopulated by king Rishabha 1 Several other literary works based on the story of Rama also mention Ayodhya These include the Abhisheka and Pratimanataka by the poet Bhasa dated 2nd century CE or earlier and the Raghuvamsha of Kalidasa c 5th century CE 7 According to the Jain tradition five tirthankaras were born at Ayodhya including Rishabhanatha Ajitanatha Abhinandananatha Sumatinatha and Anantanatha 8 Historicity editIdentification with present day Ayodhya edit Many modern scholars including B B Lal and H D Sankalia have identified the legendary Ayodhya with the present day Ayodhya town but this theory is not universally accepted 9 Arguments cited in favour of this identification include Several ancient texts including the Ramayana the Bhagavata Purana and the Padma Purana mention that the legendary Ayodhya was located on the banks of the Sarayu river just like the modern Ayodhya 10 The Gupta era texts such as Kalidasa s Raghuvamsha and the Brahmanda Purana use Ayodhya as another name for Saketa which was the ancient name of present day Ayodhya This identification also occurs in the later Sanskrit texts including Hemachandra s Abhidhana Chintamani and Yashodhara s commentary on Kamasutra 1 Several ancient texts including the Vishnu Smriti and the Matsya Purana mention Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage tirtha The 1092 CE Chandrawati inscription of the Gahadavala king Chandradeva mentions that he took bath on the Svarga dvara tirtha situated on the confluence of the Sarayau and the Ghaghra rivers at Ayodhya 11 The epics describe the legendary Ayodhya as the capital of Kosala A 1st century BCE inscription issued by Dhanadeva who describes himself as the lord of Kosala has been found at present day Ayodhya 12 Several later inscriptions also mention the city of Ayodhya 11 Identification as a legendary city edit A section of scholars have argued that the legendary Ayodhya of Ramayana is a purely mythical city and is not same as the present day Ayodhya 2 These scholars include M C Joshi Hans T Bakker 13 and a group of 25 historians from the Jawaharlal Nehru University JNU among others 2 According to these scholars the process of identifying the legendary Ayodhya with Saketa an ancient name of present day Ayodhya began in the early centuries CE and was completed during the Gupta period 14 The various arguments made in favour of identifying the legendary Ayodhya as a fictional city include the following Lack of archaeological evidence edit The JNU historians argue that according to the archaeological evidence the earliest possible settlements at Ayodhya can be dated to c 8th century BCE while the Ramayana is set much earlier The Ramayana depicts Ayodhya as an urban centre with palaces and buildings while the excavations at present day Ayodhya indicate a primitive life 15 Hans T Bakker notes that no place called Ayodhya is attested by any epigraphic or other archaeological evidence before the 2nd century CE 16 The earliest extant inscriptions mentioning a place called Ayodhya are from the Gupta period For example a 436 CE inscription describes a donation to Brahmins hailing from Ayodhya A 533 534 CE inscription mentions a nobleman from Ayodhya The Gaya inscription said to be issued by Samudragupta 4th century CE but possibly an 8th century fabrication according to modern historians describes Ayodhya as a garrison town 17 Lack of ancient literary evidence edit Early Buddhist and Jain texts mention Shravasti and Saketa not Ayodhya as the major cities of the Kosala region The later texts such as the Puranas which mention Ayodhya as the capital of Kosala simply follow the legendary Ramayana 15 According to Hans T Bakker s analysis the Sanskrit sources that mention Ayodhya but not Saketa are predominantly fictional in nature these texts include Mahabharata Ramayana and Purana pancha lakshana On the other hand the Sanskrit sources that mention Saketa but not Ayodhya are of semi scientific or factual nature 18 The Buddhist Pali language texts name a city called Ayojjha or Ayujjha Pali for Ayodhya but suggest that it was located on the banks of the Ganges river see below 19 In the early Jain canonical literature Aujjha a Prakrit form of Ayodhya is mentioned only once the Thana Sutta describes it as the capital of Gandhilavati a district of the largely mythological Mahavideha country 20 This indicates that the Ayodhya of Sanskrit epic literature is a fictional city 18 Among the Sanskrit sources the identification of Ayodhya with Saketa first appears in texts from the Gupta period including the Brahmanda Purana and Kalidasa s Raghuvamsha 17 The Jain text Paumachariya dated before 4th century CE first incorporates the Rama legend into Jain mythology During this period the Jains linked the mythology of the Ikshvaku dynasty with their tirthankaras and chakravartins For example the first tirthankara Rishabha is said to have been born in Ikkhagabhumi according to Kalpasutra or Viniya according to Jambu dvipa prajnapati which are identified as Ayodhya Aojhha or Saketa 21 In the 19th century Alexander Cunningham of Archaeological Survey of India believed that Ramayana also identifies Ayodhya with a Saketa based on a verse that supposedly describes Dasharatha as the king of Saketa nagara However this verse was fabricated by a Brahmin of Lucknow it is not found in the original Ramayana text 22 Local Vikramaditya legend edit A local oral tradition of Ayodhya first recorded in writing by Robert Montgomery Martin in 1838 23 mentions that the city was deserted after the death of Rama s descendant Brihadbala It remained deserted for several centuries until King Vikrama or Vikramaditya of Ujjain came searching for it 23 On the advice of a sage Vikrama determined that the site of ancient Ayodhya as the place where the milk would flow from the udder of a calf 15 He cut down the forests that had covered the ancient ruins established a new city erected the Ramgar fort and built 360 temples 23 According to the JNU historians this myth of re discovery seems to recognize that modern Ayodhya is not same as the ancient Ayodhya and appears to be an attempt to impart the modern town a religious sanctity that it originally lacked 15 These historians theorize that the 5th century emperor Skandagupta who adopted the title Vikramditya moved his residence to Saketa and renamed it to Ayodhya probably to associate himself with the legendary solar dynasty 15 According to Bakker the Guptas moved their capital to Saketa either during the reign of Kumaragupta I or Skandagupta and this event is possibly alluded to in the Raghuvamsha 17 Kishore Kunal argues that there is no historical evidence to support the theory that Saketa was renamed as Ayodhya by Skandagupta He notes that the Kalidasa s Raghuvamsha clearly refers to the same city by the names Saketa and Ayodhya while narrating the legend of Rama 24 Historian Gyanendra Pandey argues that Kalidasa s mention of Saketa and Ayodhya do not prove any connection between the legendary Ayodhya and the present day Ayodhya as he lived in the Gupta period c 5th century CE presumably after the Guptas had changed the name of Saketa to Ayodhya 25 Relatively recent association with Rama edit The rise of the modern Ayodhya town as a centre of Rama worship is relatively recent dating back to the 13th century when the Ramanandi sect started gaining prominence Several inscriptions dated between 5th and 8th centuries mention the town but do not mention its association with Rama The writings of Xuanzang c 602 664 CE associate the town with Buddhism It has also been an important Jain pilgrimage centre and an ancient Jain figure dated 4th 3rd century BCE has been found here The 11th century texts refer to Gopataru tirtha in Ayodhya but do not refer to the birthplace of Rama 15 Bakker notes that the legend of Rama was not always connected with Ayodhya for example the Buddhist Dasaratha jataka mentions Varanasi not Ayodhya as the capital of Dasharatha and Rama Thus the association of Rama with Ayodhya may be a result the claim that he was a member of the Ikshvaku family and this family s association with Ayodhya 18 Analysis of Ramayana edit According to M C Joshi a critical examination of the geographical data available in Valmiki s narratives does not justify the commonly accepted identification of the ancient city with the modern one For example in the Ayodhya Kanda of the Ramayana Bharata takes a geographically non sensical route while traveling to Ayodhya from the kingdom of his uncle Kekeya located in the extreme west of the Indian subcontinent During this journey he passes through places located in present day Odisha and Assam 13 Location on the banks of the Ganges edit According to Hans T Bakker the older parts of Mahabharata and Purana pancha lakshana mention Ayodhya as the capital of the Ikshvaku kings but do not state that it was situated on the banks of the Sarayu river The older parts of Ramayana only suggest that it was located in the vicinity of the Sarayu river For example Ramayana 2 70 19 states that the funeral processions of Dasharatha traveled from the city to Sarayu using palanquins and chariots which according to Bakker suggests that Sarayu was located at some distance from the city 18 According to Bakker only the newer 5th century and later parts of Ramayana explicitly describe Ayodhya as located on the banks of the Sarayu river 26 The JNU historians agree that an ancient historical city called Ayodhya Pali Ayojjha or Ayujjha 19 existed but argue that it was not same as the modern Ayodhya or the legendary city described in the Ramayana This theory is based on the fact that according to the ancient Buddhist texts the ancient Ayodhya town was located on the banks of the river Ganga Ganges not Sarayu For example the Samyutta Nikaya states Once Lord Buddha was walking in Ayodhya on the bank of the Ganga river 27 Buddhaghosha s commentary on the Samyutta Nikaya mentions that the citizens of Ayodhya Ayujjha pura built a vihara for the Buddha in a curve of the river Ganga 19 Kishore Kunal argues that the word Ganga is also used as common noun for a holy river in Sanskrit 27 In his support he presents another verse from Samyutta Nikaya 4 35 241 205 which states Once Lord Buddha was walking in Kaushambi on the bank of the Ganga river The ancient city of Kaushambi was actually located on the banks of the river Yamuna not Ganga 28 S N Arya similarly points out that the 7th century Chinese Buddhist traveler Xuanzang states that he reached Ayodhya A yu te after crossing the Ganga river while traveling southwards Ayodhya is actually located to the north of the Ganges river Xuanzang seems to have used the term Ganga to describe a long affluent of the great river 29 Taittiriya Aranyaka and Atharvaveda description edit M C Joshi asserted that Ayodhya is mentioned in a Taittiriya Aranyaka verse which is also found with some variations in the Atharvaveda 30 aṣṭacakra navadvara devanaṃ purayodhya tasyaṃ hiraṇyayaḥkosaḥ svargo loko jyotiṣavṛtaḥ yo vai taṃ brahmaṇo vedamṛtenavṛtaṃ puram tasmai brahma ca brahma ca ayuḥ kirtim prajaṃ daduḥ vibhrajamanam hariṇiṃ yasasa saṃparivṛtam puraṃ hiraṇyayiṃ brahma vivesaparajitam Ayodhya impregnable the city of the gods consists of eight circles also cycles and nine entrances within it there is the golden treasure dome the celestial world ever illuminated with light north pole Whoever knows it as the Creator s city ever surrounded with nectar will have long life fame and offspring bestowed on him by Brahma the sun and Brahma the moon Into this city ever shining moving and pervaded with Yasas fame and lustre the Creator has entered Taittiriya Aranyaka 1 27 Translation by M C Joshi 31 Joshi argues that the Ayodhya city as described in the Taittiriya Aranyaka and Atharvaveda is obviously a mythical city because it is said to be surrounded by a pool of nectar and is described as the location of the golden treasure dome of the celestial world According to Joshi this Ayodhya is similar to the mythical places such as Samavasarana and Nandishvaradvipa which appear in the Jain mythology 31 According to other scholars such as B B Lal the word ayodhya in this context is not a proper noun the name of a city but an adjective meaning impregnable 32 The verse describes the human body pur as having eight chakras and nine orifices 33 aṣṭacakra navadvara devanaṃ purayodhya tasyaṃ hiraṇyayaḥkosaḥ svargo jyotiṣavṛtaḥ Eight wheeled nine doored is the impregnable stronghold of the gods in that is a golden vessel heaven going swarga covered with light Atharvaveda 10 2 31 Translation by William Dwight Whitney 32 Lal points out that two cognate forms ayodhyena and ayodhyaḥ appear in Atharvaveda 19 13 3 and 19 13 7 respectively in similar sense of invincible The 14th century commentator Sayana also confirms this meaning of the word 34 the later text Bhagavad Gita also describes the human body as a city with nine doors in which the soul resides This confirms that the Atharvaveda uses ayodhya as an adjective not as the name of a city 11 References edit a b c d Hans T Bakker 1984 p 7 a b c Sarvepalli Gopal et al 1995 p 76 Hans T Bakker 1982 p 103 126 K D Bajpai 1967 p 42 Meenakshi Jain 2013 p 91 Hans T Bakker 1982 p 103 104 Kishore Kunal 2016 pp 8 9 Paras Kumar Choudhary 2004 Herman Paul 2015 pp 113 114 S N Arya 1990 p 44 a b c S N Arya 1990 p 46 S N Arya 1990 p 45 a b Hans T Bakker 1984 p 10 Hans T Bakker 1984 pp 11 12 a b c d e f Sarvepalli Gopal et al 1995 pp 76 81 Hans T Bakker 1984 p 9 11 a b c Hans T Bakker 1984 p 12 a b c d Hans T Bakker 1984 p 9 a b c Hans T Bakker 1984 p 5 Hans T Bakker 1984 p 3 Hans T Bakker 1984 p 11 Kishore Kunal 2016 pp 9 10 a b c Hans T Bakker 1984 p 30 Kishore Kunal 2016 p 9 Gyanendra Pandey 2006 p 97 Hans T Bakker 1984 p 7 10 a b Kishore Kunal 2016 p 6 Kishore Kunal 2016 pp 5 6 S N Arya 1990 pp 44 45 B B Lal 1978 79 pp 46 47 a b B B Lal 1978 79 p 46 a b B B Lal 1978 79 p 47 B B Lal 1978 79 pp 47 48 B B Lal 1978 79 p 48 Bibliography edit B B Lal 1978 79 K N Dikshit ed Was Ayodhya a mythical city Puratattva 10 Indian Archaeological Society Gopal Sarvepalli Thapar Romila Chandra Bipan Bhattacharya Sabyasachi Jaiswal Suvira Mukhia Harbans Panikkar K N Champakalakshmi R Saberwal Satish Chattopadhyaya B D Verma R N Meenakshi K Alam Muzaffar Singh Dilbagh Mukherjee Mridula Palat Madhavan Mukherjee Aditya Ratnagar S F Bhattacharya Neeladri Trivedi K K Sharma Yogesh Chakravarti Kunal Josh Bhagwan Gurukkal Rajan Ray Himanshu 1990 The Political Abuse of History Babri Masjid Rama Janmabhumi Dispute Social Scientist 18 1 2 76 81 doi 10 2307 3517330 JSTOR 3517330 Hans T Bakker 1984 Ayodhya Institute of Indian Studies University of Groningen OCLC 769116023 Hans T Bakker 1982 The rise of Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage Indo Iranian Journal 24 2 103 126 doi 10 1163 000000082790081267 S2CID 161957449 Herman Paul 2015 Key Issues in Historical Theory Routledge ISBN 9 781 31751 945 4 K D Bajpai 1967 The Geographical Encyclopaedia of Ancient and Medieval India Based on Vedic Puranic Tantric Jain Buddhistic Literature and Historical Records Indic Academy Kishore Kunal 2016 Ayodhya Revisited Ocean Books ISBN 978 81 8430 357 5 Meenakshi Jain 2013 Rama and Ayodhya New Delhi Aryan Books ISBN 978 8173054518 Gyanendra Pandey 2006 Routine Violence Stanford University Press Paras Kumar Choudhary 2004 Sociology of Pilgrims Kalpaz Publications ISBN 978 81 7835 243 5 S N Arya 1990 Historicity of Ayodhya Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 51 Indian History Congress 44 48 JSTOR 44148186 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ayodhya Ramayana amp oldid 1216271140, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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