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Brahmana

The Brahmanas (/ˈbrɑːmənəz/; Sanskrit: ब्राह्मणम्, Brāhmaṇam) are Vedic śruti works attached to the Samhitas (hymns and mantras) of the Rig, Sama, Yajur, and Atharva Vedas. They are a secondary layer or classification of Sanskrit texts embedded within each Veda, which explain and instruct on the performance of Vedic rituals (in which the related Samhitas are recited). In addition to explaining the symbolism and meaning of the Samhitas, Brahmana literature also expounds scientific knowledge of the Vedic Period, including observational astronomy and, particularly in relation to altar construction, geometry. Divergent in nature, some Brahmanas also contain mystical and philosophical material that constitutes Aranyakas and Upanishads.[1]

A 17th-century manuscript page of Sadvimsha Brahmana, a Pañcaviṃśa-Brāhmaṇa supplement (Sanskrit, Devanagari). It is found embedded in the Samaveda.

Each Veda has one or more of its own Brahmanas, and each Brahmana is generally associated with a particular Shakha or Vedic school. Less than twenty Brahmanas are currently extant, as most have been lost or destroyed. Dating of the final codification of the Brahmanas and associated Vedic texts is controversial, as they were likely recorded after several centuries of oral transmission.[2] The oldest Brahmana is dated to about 900 BCE, while the youngest are dated to around 700 BCE.[3][4]

Nomenclature and etymology

Brahmana (or Brāhmaṇam, Sanskrit: ब्राह्मणम्) can be loosely translated as 'explanations of sacred knowledge or doctrine' or 'Brahmanical explanation'.[5] According to the Monier-Williams Sanskrit dictionary, 'Brahmana' means:[6]

  • 'Explanations of sacred knowledge or doctrine [especially] for the use of the Brāhmans in their sacrifices'.
  • 'The Brāhmaṇa portion of the Veda (as distinct from its Mantra and Upanishad portion) and consisting of a class of works called Brāhmaṇas (they contain rules for the employment of the Mantras or hymns at various sacrifices, with detailed explanations of their origin and meaning and numerous old legends)'.
  • According to 'Sāyaṇa to contain two parts: 1. vidhi, rules or directions for [sacrificial] rites [and] 2. artha-vāda, explanatory remarks'.

Etymology

M. Haug states that etymologically, 'the word ['Brahmana' or 'Brahmanam'] is derived from brahman which properly signifies the Brahma priest who must know all Vedas, and understand the whole course and meaning of the sacrifice... the dictum of such a Brahma priest who passed as a great authority, was called a Brahmanam'.[7]

Synonyms

S. Shrava states that synonyms of the word 'Brahmana' include:[8]

  • Vyakhyana: In Brahmana works such as the Shatapatha Brahmana (6.7.4.6),[9] 'the word vyakhyana also is a synonym of the commonly used word brahmana'. Definitions of 'Vyakhyana' (व्याख्यान) include 'explaining', 'exposition', 'elucidation', 'expounding', 'interpretation', and 'lecture'.[10]
  • Pravachana': Another 'synonym of the brahmana word is pravachana'. Definitions of 'Pravachana' (प्रवचन) include 'expounding', 'teaching', 'exposition', and 'oral instruction'.[11]
  • Vijnayate: Is 'used to denote a reference from a brahmana work. The word has first of all been used in the Gopatha Brahmana'. Definitions of 'Vijnayate' include 'It is a fact that...' and 'be distinguished or discerned'.[12]

Overview

 
Performance of Yajna.

R. Dalal states that the 'Brahmanas are texts attached to the Samhitas [hymns] - Rig, Sama, Yajur and Atharva Vedas - and provide explanations of these and guidance for the priests in sacrificial rituals'.[13] S. Shri elaborates, stating 'Brahmanas explain the hymns of the Samhitas and are in both prose and verse form... The Brahmanas are divided into Vidhi and Arthavada. Vidhi are commands in the performance of Vedic sacrifices, and Arthavada praises the rituals, the glory of the Devas and so on. The belief in reincarnation and transmigration of soul started with [the] Brahmanas... [The] Brahmana period ends around 500 BC[E] with the emergence of Buddhism and it overlaps the period of Aranyakas, Sutras, Smritis and the first Upanishads'.[14]

M. Haug states that the 'Veda, or scripture of the Brahmans, consists, according to the opinion of the most eminent divines of Hindustan, of two principal parts, viz. Mantra [Samhita] and Brahmanam... Each of the four Vedas (Rik, Yajus, Saman, and Atharvan) has a Mantra, as well as a Brahmana portion. The difference between both may be briefly stated as follows: That part which contains the sacred prayers, the invocations of the different deities, the sacred verses for chanting at the sacrifices, the sacrificial formulas [is] called Mantra... The Brahmanam [part] always presupposes the Mantra; for without the latter it would have no meaning... [they contain] speculations on the meaning of the mantras, gives precepts for their application, relates stories of their origin... and explains the secret meaning of the latter'.[7]

J. Eggeling states that 'While the Brâhmanas are thus our oldest sources from which a comprehensive view of the sacrificial ceremonial can be obtained, they also throw a great deal of light on the earliest metaphysical and linguistic speculations of the Hindus. Another, even more interesting feature of these works, consists in the numerous legends scattered through them. From the archaic style in which these mythological tales are generally composed, as well as from the fact that not a few of them are found in Brâhmanas of different schools and Vedas, though often with considerable variations, it is pretty evident that the ground-work of many of them goes back to times preceding the composition of the Brâhmanas'.[15]

The Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) states that while 'the Upanishads speculate on the nature of the universe, and the relationship of the one and the many, the immanent and transcendental, the Brahmanas make concrete the world-view and the concepts through a highly developed system of ritual-yajna. This functions as a strategy for a continuous reminder of the inter-relatedness of man and nature, the five elements and the sources of energy'.[16]

Performance of rituals

The Brahmanas are particularly noted for their instructions on the proper performance of rituals, as well as explanations on the symbolic importance of sacred words and ritual actions.[17] Academics such as P. Alper, K. Klostermaier and F.M, Muller state that these instructions insist on exact pronunciation (accent),[18] chhandas (छन्दः, meters), precise pitch, with coordinated movement of hand and fingers – that is, perfect delivery.[19][20] Klostermaier adds that the Satapatha Brahamana, for example, states that verbal perfection made a mantra infallible, while one mistake made it powerless.[19] Scholars suggest that this orthological perfection preserved Vedas in an age when writing technology was not in vogue, and the voluminous collection of Vedic knowledge were taught to and memorized by dedicated students through Svādhyāya, then remembered and verbally transmitted from one generation to the next.[19][21] It seems breaking silence too early in at least one ritual is permissible in the Satapatha (1.1.4.9), where 'in that case mutter some Rik [RigVeda] or Yagus-text [YajurVeda] addressed to Vishnu; for Vishnu is the sacrifice, so that he thereby regains obtains a hold on the sacrifice, and penance is there by done by him'.[22]

The Nirukta

Recorded by the grammarian Yaska, the Nirukta, one of the six Vedangas or 'limbs of the Vedas' concerned with correct etymology and interpretation of the Vedas, references several Brahmanas to do so. These are (grouped by Veda):[23]

Veda Brahmana Comment
RigVeda Aitareya and Kausitaki
SamaVeda Sadvimsa, Mantra, and Daivata The Mantra Brahmana is from the first two chapters of the Chandogya Brahmana.
YajurVeda Shatapatha There are two versions or recensions by different Shakhas: Madhyandina and Kanva.

Both apply to the Śukla (White) YajurVeda.

Taittiriya Applies to the Krishna (Black) YajurVeda
AtharvaVeda Gopatha The only surviving (i.e. extant) Brahmana of this Veda.

Commentaries of Sayana

The 14th Century Sanskrit scholar Sayana composed numerous commentaries on Vedic literature, including the Samhitas, Brahmanas, Aranyakas, and Upanishads. B.R. Modak states that 'king Bukka [1356–1377 CE] requested his preceptor and minister Madhavacharya to write a commentary on the Vedas, so that even common people would be able to understand the meaning of the Vedic Mantras. Madhavacharya told him that his younger brother Sayana was a learned person and hence he should be entrusted with the task'.[24] Modak also lists the Brahmanas commented upon by Sayana (with the exception of the Gopatha):[24]

Veda Brahmana Comment
RigVeda Aitareya
SamaVeda Panchavimsha, Sadvimsa, Samavidhana, Arsheya, Daivata, Chandogya, Samhitopanishad, Vamsha All 8 Brahmanas are of the Kauthuma Shakha.
YajurVeda Taittirita, Shatapatha (Mâdhyandina recension)
AtharvaVeda Gopatha See the main article on the Gopatha Brahmana.
Note: It seems only a few commentaries of Sayana have been translated into English.

Abbreviations and schools

For ease of reference, academics often use common abbreviations to refer to particular Brahmanas and other Vedic, post-Vedic (e.g. Puranas), and Sanskrit literature. Additionally, particular Brahmanas linked to particular Vedas are also linked to (i.e. recorded by) particular Shakhas or schools of those Vedas as well. Based on the abbreviations and Shakhas provided by works cited in this article (and other texts by Bloomfield, Keith, W. D, Whitney, and H.W. Tull),[25][26][27][28] extant Brahmanas have been listed below, grouped by Veda and Shakha. Note that:

  • "--" indicates the abbreviation or school has not been provided or found
  • There are variations of how the translated names of Vedas, Shakhas, and Brahmanas are spelt
  • Lost or fragmentary Brahmanas (e.g. the Kathaka Brahmana, KathB) have not been listed (see the section of Lost Brahmanas, below)
RigVeda SamaVeda YajurVedaa AtharvaVeda
Name Abbreviation Shakha Name Abbreviation Shakha Name Abbreviation Shakha Name Abbreviation Shakha
Aitareya AB, AiB Shakala Panchavimshac PB Kuthuma-Ranayaniya / Tandin Shatapathaf SB, CB Mâdhyandina Gopatha GB Paippalada and Shaunaka
Kausitaki / Samkhyanab KB Baskala Tandyac TMB, PB Shatapathaf SBM, MSB, CB
Sadvimsac SB, SadvB Kauthuma Shatapathaf SBK, CBK Kanva
Adbhutac AdB Taittiriya TB Taittiriya
Samavidhana Svidh, SVB Taittiriya Chardi --
Pravargyag
Daivatad DB Vadhula - Anvakhyanah VadhAnva Vadhula
Samhitopanishad Samhitopanisad.B
Arsheya --
Vamsha VB
Chandogyae --
Mantrae MB, SMB
Jaiminiya JB, Jaim. Br. Jaiminiya
Jaiminiya Arsheya --
a: The Śukla (White) YajurVeda referred to by the Shatapatha Brahmana is the Vajasaneyi Samhita (Mâdhyandina recension: VS, Vag. S.; Kanva recension: VSK). The Krishna (Black) YajurVeda referred to by the Taittiriya Brahmana is the Taittiriya Samhita (TS).

b: The Kausitaki and Samkhyana are generally considered to be the same Brahmana. Also called the Cankhayana Brahmana.[27]

c: The Panchavismsha and Tandya are the same Brahmana. The Sadvimsa Brahmana is considered to be an appendix to the Panchavismsha / Tandya Brahmana. The Adbhuta Brahmana is from the last part of the Sadvimsa Brahmana and deals with 'omens and supernatural things'.[29] Attributed by Caland to the Kuthuma-Ranayaniya Shakha,[30] but by Macdonell to the Tandin Shakha.[31]

d: Also called the Devatadhyaya Brahmana.

e: The Mantra Brahmana (also called the Samaveda-Mantrabrahmana, SMB) is from the first two chapters of the Chandogya Brahmana (also called the Chandogyaopanishad and the Upanishad Brahmana); the remaining chapters of the Chandogya Brahmana form the Chandogya Upanishad.

f: Also called the Catapatha Brahmana (CB; this abbreviation also denotes the Mâdhyandina recension)

g: Part of the Taittiriya Aranyaka; explains the Pravargya rite. Generally not considered a Brahmana-proper, although it has been published as one.[32]

h: Linked with the Krishna (Black) YajurVeda, it is 'actually part of the Vadhula Shrauta Sutra'.[13]

Recensions by Disciples of Vyasa

S. Sharva states that in 'the brahmana literature this word ['brahmana'] has been commonly used as detailing the ritualism related to the different sacrifices or yajnas... The known recensions [i.e. schools or Shakhas] of the Vedas, all had separate brahmanas. Most of these brahmanas are not extant.... [Panini] differentiates between the old and the new brahmanas... [he asked] Was it when Krishna Dvaipayana Vyasa had propounded the Vedic recensions? The brahmanas which had been propounded prior to the exposition of recensions by [Vyasa] were called as old brahmanas and those which had been expounded by his disciples were known as new brahmanas'.[8]

RigVeda

The Aitareya, Kausitaki, and Samkhyana Brahmanas are the two (or three) known extant Brahmanas of the RigVeda. A.B. Keith, a translator of the Aitareya and Kausitaki Brahmanas, states that it is 'almost certainly the case that these two [Kausitaki and Samkhyana] Brahmanas represent for us the development of a single tradition, and that there must have been a time when there existed a single... text [from which they were developed and diverged]'.[33] Although S. Shrava considers the Kausitaki and Samkhyana Brahmanas to be separate although very similar works,[8] M. Haug considers them to be the same work referred to by different names.[7]

Aitareya Brahmana

The sun does never set nor rise. When people think the sun is setting (it is not so). For, after having arrived at the end of the day, it makes itself produce two opposite effects, making night to what is below and day to what is on the other side...Having reached the end of the night, it makes itself produce two opposite effects, making day to what is below and night to what is on the other side. In fact, the sun never sets. Nor does it set for him who has such a knowledge. Such a one becomes united with the sun, assumes its form, and enters its place.

— Aitareya Brahmanam of the RigVeda, translated by Martin Haug (1922), Book 3, Chapter 4, Section 44[34]
 
Page from the Aitareya Brahmana.

As detailed in the main article, the Aitareya Brahmana (AB) is ascribed to the sage Mahidasa Aitareya of the Shakala Shakha (Shakala school) of the Rigveda, and is estimated to have been recorded around 600-400 BCE.[33] It is also linked with the Ashvalayana Shakha.[13] The text itself consists of eight pañcikās (books), each containing five adhyayas (chapters; totalling forty in all). C. Majumdar states that 'it deals principally with the great Soma sacrifices and the different ceremonies of royal inauguration'.[29]

Haug states that the legend about this Brahmana, as told by Sayana, is that the 'name "Aitareya" is by Indian tradition traced to Itara... An ancient Risi had among his many wives one who was called Itara. She had a son Mahidasa by name [i.e. Mahidasa Aitareya]... The Risi preferred the sons of his other wives to Mahidasa, and went even so far as to insult him once by placing all his other children in his lap to his exclusion. His mother, grieved at this ill-treatment of her son, prayed to her family deity (Kuladevata), [and] the Earth (Bhumi), who appeared in her celestial form in the midst of the assembly, placed him on a throne (simhasana), and gave him as a token of honour for his surpassing all other children in learning a boon (vara) which had the appearance of a Brahmana [i.e. the Aitareya]'.[7] P. Deussen agrees, relating the same story.[35] Notably, The story itself is remarkably similar to the legend of a Vaishnava boy called Dhruva in the Puranas (e.g. Bhagavata Purana, Canto 4, Chapter 8-12).[36]

Kausitaki / Samkhyana Brahmana

The gods and the Asuras were in conflict over these worlds. From them Agni departed, and entered the seasons. The gods, having been victorious and having slain the Asuras, sought for him; Yama and Varuna discerned him. Him (the gods) invited, him they instructed, to him they offered a boon. He chose this as a boon, '(Give) me the fore-offering and the after-offerings for my own, and the ghee of the waters and make of plants.' Therefore they say 'Agni's are the fore-offerings and the after-offerings; Agni's is the butter.' Then indeed did the gods prosper, the Asuras were defeated. He prospers himself, his foe is defeated, who knows thus.

— Rigveda Brahmanas: The Aitareya And Kausitaki Brahmanas Of The Rigveda, translated by Arthur Berriedale Keith (1920), Kausitaki Brahmana, Adhyaya I, Verse 2[33]
 
Tools used for Yajna.

The Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) states that the 'Kaushitaki Brahmana [is] associated with Baskala Shakha of [the] Rigveda and [is] also called Sankhyayana Brahmana. It is divided into thirty chapters [adhyayas] and 226 Khanda[s]. The first six chapters dealing with food sacrifice and the remaining to Soma sacrifice. This work is ascribed to Sankhyayana or Kaushitaki'.[37] S. Shrava disagrees, stating that it 'was once considered that [the] Kaushitaki or Samkhayana was the name of the same brahmana... [but the Samkhayana] differs, though slightly, from the Kaushitaki Brahmana'.[8] C. Majumdar states that it 'deals not only with the Soma, but also other sacrifices'.[29]

Keith estimates that the Kaisitaki Brahmana was recorded around 600-400 BCE, adding that it is more 'scientific' and 'logical' than the Aitareya Brahmana, although much 'of the material of the Kausitaki, and especially the legends, has been taken over by the Brahmana from a source common to it and the Aitareya, but the whole has been worked up into a harmonious unity which presents no such irregularities as are found in the Aitareya. It is clearly a redaction of the tradition of the school made deliberately after the redaction of the Aitareya'.[33]

Kaushitaki Brahmana Upanishad

Max Müller states that the Kaushitaki Upanishad - also called the Kaushitaki Brahmana Upanishad (KBU) - 'does not form part of the Kaushîtaki-brâhmana in 30 adhyâyas which we possess, and we must therefore account for its name by admitting that the Âranyaka, of which it formed a portion, could be reckoned as part of the Brâhmana literature of the Rig-veda (see Aitareya-âranyaka, Introduction, p. xcii), and that hence the Upanishad might be called the Upanishad of the Brâhmana of the Kaushîtakins'.[38]

SamaVeda

W. Caland states that of the SamaVeda, three Shakhas (schools or branches) 'are to be distinguished; that of the Kauthumas, that of the Ranayaniyas, and that of the Jaiminiyas'.[39]

Panchavimsha / Tandya Brahmana

Visnu is the sacrifice; what here (on this day) is not brought about, that he brings about through Vishnu (who is) the sacrifice.

— Pancavimsa Brahmana, translated by W. Caland (1931), Prapathaka XIII (13), Adhyaya 5, Verse 5[40]

Caland states that the Panchavimsha / Tandya Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha consists of 25 prapathakas (books or chapters).[39] C. Majumdar states that it 'is one of the oldest and most important of Brahmanas. It contains many old legends, and includes the Vratyastoma, a ceremony by which people of non-Aryan stock could be admitted into the Aryan family'.[29]

Sadvimsa Brahmana

 
Sadvimsha Brahmana page.

The Sadvimsa Brahmana is also of the Kauthuma Shakha, and consists of 5 adhyayas (lessons or chapters). Caland states it is 'a kind of appendix to the [Panchavimsha Brahmana], reckoned as its 26th book [or chapter]... The text clearly intends to supplement the Pancavimsabrahmana, hence its desultory character. It treats of the Subrahmanya formula, of the one-day-rites that are destined to injure (abhicara) and other matters. This brahmana, at least partly, is presupposed by the Arseyakalpa and the Sutrakaras'.[39]

Adbhuta Brahmana

Caland states that the Adbhuta Brahmana, also of the Kauthuma Shakha, is the 'latest part [i.e. 5th adhyaya of the Sadvimsa Brahmana], that which treats of Omina and Portenta [Omens and Divination]'.[39] Majumdar agrees.[29]

Samavidhana Brahmana

Caland states that the Samavidhana Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is 'in 3 prapathakas [books or chapters]... its aim is to explain how by chanting various samans [hymns of the SamaVeda][41] some end may be attained. It is probably older than one of the oldest dharmasastras, that of Gautama'.[39]

Daivata Brahmana

 
Page from the SamaVeda samhita and brahmanam.

Caland states that the Daivata Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is 'in 3 prapathakas [books or chapters]... It deals with the deities to which the samans are addressed'.[39] Dalal adds that the 'first part of the Devatadhyaya is the most important as it provides rules to determine the deities to whom the samans are dedicated. Another section ascribes colours to different verses, probably as aids to memory or for meditation... [It] includes some very late passages such as references to the four yugas or ages'.[13]

Samhitopanishad Brahmana

Caland states that the Samhitopanishad Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is 'in 5 khandas [books]... It treats of the effects of recitation, the relation of the saman [hymns of the SamaVeda] and the words on which it is chanted, the daksinas to be given to the religious teacher'.[39] Dalal agrees, stating that it 'describes the nature of the chants and their effects, and how the riks or Rig Vedic verses were converted into samans. Thus it reveals some of the hidden aspects of the Sama Veda'.[13]

Arsheya Brahmana

Caland states that the Arsheya Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is ''in 3 prapathakas [books or chapters]... This quasi-brahmana is, on the whole, nothing more than an anukramanika, a mere list of the names of the samans [hymns of the SamaVeda] occurring in the first two ganas [of the Kauthumas, i.e. the Gramegeya-gana / Veya-gana and the Aramyegeya-gana / Aranya-gana]'.[39] The nature of the ganas noted are discussed in the same text. As illustrated below, this Brahmana is virtually identical to the Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana of the Jaiminiya Shakha.

Vamsha Brahmana

Caland states that the Vamsha Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is 'in 3 khandas [books]... it contains the lists of teachers of the Samaveda'.[39] Notably, Dalal adds that of the 53 teachers listed, the 'earliest teacher, Kashyapa, is said to have received the teaching from the god, Agni'.[13]

Jaiminiya Brahmana

He should proceed thus: Having taken a water-pot or a water-jar he should go pouring it out from the garhapatya to the ahavaniya with the verse: "Here Visnu strode". The rc [RigVeda verse, e.g. 1.22.17] is a divine purification, water is a divine purification. Whatever here is unappeased of the sacrifice and whatever is impure, for all that, water forms the means of appeasing. So by water they appease it.

— Jaiminya Brahmana, translated by Hendrik Bodewitz (1973), Book 1, Section 52 ('Vehicles or animals pass between the fires')[42][43]
 
Page form the Mimamsa sutra of Jaiminimi, who also recorded the Jaiminiya Brahmana and other works.[44]

It seems that this Brahmana has not been fully translated to date, or at least a full translation has not been made available.

S. Shrava states that the Jaiminiya Brahmana of the Jaiminiya Shakha, also called the Talavakara Brahmana, 'is divided into 1348 khandas [verses]... Many of the sentences of this brahmana are similar to those found in Tamdya, Sadavimsam, Satapatha [Brahmanas] and [the] Taittirya Samhita [Krishna/Black YajurVeda]. Many of the hymns are found for the first time in it. Their composition is different from that available in Vedic literature. Most of the subjects described in it are completely new and are not found in other bramanas like Tamdya, etc... In the beginning khandas, details of daily oblation to the sacrificial fire are described... This brahmana was compiled by Jaimini a famous preceptor of Samaveda and the worthy disciple of Krishna Dvaipayana Vedavyasa and his disciple Talavakara'.[8]

Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana

Dalal states that the Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana of the Jaiminiya Shakha 'is similar to the Arsheya Brahmana of the Kauthuma school but for the fact that the names of the rishis in the two are different. Unlike the Kauthuma texts, this lists only one rishi per saman'.[13]

Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana

As detailed in the main article, also called the Talavakara Upanishad Brahmana and Jaiminiyopanishad Brahmana, it is considered an Aranyaka - not a Brahmana - and forms part of the Kena Upanishad.

Chandogya Brahmana

Now that light which shines above this heaven, higher than all, higher than everything, in the highest world, beyond which there are no other worlds, that is the same light which is within man.

— Chandogya Upanishad, edited by F.M. Muller (1879), Prapathaka 3 (Prapathaka 5 of the Chandogya Brahmana), Khanda 13, Verse 7[45]

The Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) states that the Chandogya Brahmana, also called the chanddogyopanishad Brahmana, 'is divided into ten prapathakas (chapters). Its first two prapathakas (chapters) form the Mantra Brahmana (MB) and each of them is divided into eight khandas (sections). Prapathakas 3–10 form the Chandogya Upanishad'.[46] K.G. Witz states it is of the Kauthuma Shakha (see below).[47]

Mantra Brahmana

K. G. Witz states that the Mantra Brahmana is 'a text in two chapters which mostly give Vedic Mantras which should be used in rites such as for birth and marriage. The combined text [with 8 chapters forming the Chandogya Upanishad] is [also] called [the] Upanishad Brahmana and is one of the eight canonical Brahmanas of the Kauthumas. The fact that the Upanishad was combined with the Mantra Brahmana into a single text is significant. Just as everyone in society is blessed and made part of the overall divine societal, social and world order by the household rites in the Mantra Brahmana, so everyone can direct his life toward the Infinite Reality by the numerous upasanas and vidyas of the Chandogya Upanishad.'[47]

R. Mitra is quoted as stating that of 'the two portions differ greatly, and judged by them they appear to be productions of very different ages, though both are evidently relics of pretty remote antiquity. Of the two chapters of the Khandogya-Brahmana [Chandogya Brahmana, forming the Mantra Brahmana], the first includes eight suktas [hymns] on the ceremony of marriage and the rites necessary to be observed at the birth of a child. The first Sukta is intended to be recited when offering an oblation to Agni on the occasion of a marriage, and its object is to pray for prosperity [on] behalf of the married couple. The second prays for a long life, kind relatives, and a numerous progeny [i.e. children]. The third is the marriage pledge by which the [couple] bind themselves to each other. Its spirit may be guessed from a single verse. In talking of the unanimity with which they will dwell, the bridegroom addresses his bride, "That heart of thine shall be mine, and this heart of mine shall be thine" [as quoted above]'.[49]

YajurVeda

Śukla (White) YajurVeda: Shatapatha Brahmana

 
Extract from a 13th-century manuscript of the Shatapatha Brahmana (Khanda 14).

As detailed in the main article, the 'final form' of the Satapatha Brahmana is estimated to have been recorded around 1000-800 BCE, although it refers to astronomical phenomena dated to 2100 BCE, and as quoted above, historical events such as the Sarasvati river drying up, believed to have occurred around 1900 BCE.[52] It provides scientific knowledge of geometry and observational astronomy from the Vedic period, and is considered significant in the development of Vaishnavism as the possible origin of several Puranic legends and avatars of the RigVedic god Vishnu, all of which (Matsya, Kurma, Varaha, Narasimha, and Vamana) are listed in the Dashavatara.

M. Winternitz states that this Brahmana is 'the best known, the most extensive, and doubtless, also on account of its contents, the most important of all the Brahmanas'.[1] Eggeling states that 'The Brâhmana of the Vâgasaneyins bears the name of Satapatha, that is, the Brâhmana 'of a hundred paths,' because it consists of a hundred lectures (adhyâyas). Both the gasaneyi-samhitâ [YajurVeda] and the Satapatha-brâhmana have come down to us in two different recensions, those of the Mâdhyandina and the nva schools':[15]

  • Mâdhyandina recension: Ascribed to Yājñavalkya Vājasaneya, it consists of 14 khandas ('books') which can be divided into two major parts. The first nine khandas are commentaries of the corresponding samhita of the Śukla (white) Yajurveda. The final five khandas cover supplementary and ritualistically newer material; and the final book constitutes the Bṛhad-Āraṇyaka Upaniṣad.[15]
  • Kanva recension: Ascribed to Samkara, it consists of 17 khandas. The IGNCA adds that 'the division of Kandika [verses] is more rational in the Kanva text than in the other... The name 'Satapatha', as Eggeling has suggested, might have been based on the number of Adhyayas [chapters] in the Madhyandina which is exactly one hundred. But the Kanva recension, which has one hundred and four Adhyayas is also known by the same name. In Indian tradition words like 'sata' and 'sahasra', indicating numbers, do not always stand for exact numbers'.[16]

Krishna (Black) YajurVeda: Taittiriya Brahmana

When the completion of yajna does not happen in a year (samvatsara) then everything is not stable. Then one has to seek the grace of Vishnu (Vamana) by performing a special rite on the ekadashi day. Yajna means Vishnu (worshipping Vishnu). They perform yajna only for stabilising. They depend on Indra and Agni. Indra and Agni give the abode for Gods (devas). Devas only seek shelter in them and only depend on them.

— Taittiriya Brahmana, translated by R.L. Kashyap (2017), Ashtaka 1, Prapathaka 2, Anuvaka 5, Verses 1-7[53]
 
Page of the Taittiriya Samhita.

Ascribed to the sage Tittiri (or Taittiri), the Taittiriya Brahmana of the Taittiriya Shakha consists of three Ashtakas (books or parts) of commentaries on the performance of Vedic sacrificial rituals, astronomy, and information about the gods. It is stated by the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) to be 'mixed of mantras and Brahmans... composed in poetic and prose manner'.[54]

M. Winternitz adds that the "Taittiriya-Brahmana of the Black YajurVeda is nothing but a continuation of the Taittiriya-Samhita, for the Brahmanas were already included in the Samhitas of the Black YajurVeda. The Taittiriya-Brahmana, therefore, contains only later additions to the Samhita."[1]

According to the Monier-Williams Sanskrit Dictionary, Taittiri was a disciple of Yaska (300-400 BCE),[55] although according to the Vishnu Purana (Book 3, Chapter 5), Taittiri and Yaska were disciples of Vaiśampáyana (500-600 BCE).[56] According to H.H. Wilson, in the Anukramańí (index of the black YajurVeda), it 'is there said that Vaiśampáyana taught it to Yaska, who taught it to Tittiri, who also became a teacher; whence the term Taittiríya, for a grammatical rule explains it to mean, 'The Taittiríyas are those who read what was said or repeated by Tittiri'.'[57]

Taittiriya Chardi

Although the Taittiriya Chardi Brahmana is mentioned (i.e. listed) by academics such as S. Shri[14] and S.N. Nair,[58] no further information could be found.

Taittiriya Pravargya

The Taittiriya Pravargya is a commentary on the Pravargya ritual, contained in the Taittiriya Aranyaka. This is not listed or referred to as a Brahmana in the works cited.

Vadhula - Anvakhyana

Dalal states that the Vadhula (or Anvakhyana) Brahmana of the Vadhula Shakha is 'a Brahmana type of text, though it is actually part of the Vadhula Shrauta Sutra'.[13] However, B.B. Chaubey states that about 'the nature of the text there has been confusion whether VadhAnva [Vadhula Anvakhyana Brahmana] is a Brahmana, or an Anubrahmana ['work resembling a brahmana' or 'according to the brahmana'],[59] or an Anvakhyana ['explanation keeping close to the text' or 'minute account or statement'].[60] When Caland found some newly discovered MSS [manuscript] of the Vadhula School he was not sure about the nature of the text. Because of the composite nature of the MS [manuscript] he took the text as part of the Srautasurta of the Vadhulas. However, he was not unaware of the Brahmanic character of the text... according to Caland, the word Anvakhyana was given as a specific name to the Brahmanas, or Brahmana-like passages of the Vadhulasutra'.[61]

AtharvaVeda

According to M. Bloomfield, the following 9 shakhas - schools or branches - of the AtharvaVeda are the:[62]

  • Paippalada, Paippaladaka, Paippaladi, Pippalada, or Paopalayana: A 'patronymic derived from the name of a teacher Pippaladi'.
  • Tauda, Taudayana, Stauda, or Staudayana: There is 'nothing to the real history of the name'.
  • Mauda or Maydayana
  • Saunakiya, Saunaka, or Saunakin
  • Jajala: 'The acarya eponymous of the school seems to have been Jajali, as reported by the Mahabhasya'.
  • Jalada or Jaladayana
  • Brahmavada
  • Devadarsa or Devadarsin
  • Caranavaidya

Gopatha Brahmana

These (waters) which having encircled the seed, the ocean, rested into (it); those (waters) flowed together towards the east, south, west, and north. In that those (waters) flowed together (towards it), therefore, it is called samudra (ocean). Frightened they said to the lord, alone may we choose as King. And in that having encircled (the ocean), rested into (it), that became Varana. Him who is (really) Varana they call mystically Varuna. Gods are fond of mystical (presentation) as it were, and haters of direct (presentation).

— Gopatha Brahmana, translated by H.C. Patyal (1969), Prapathaka I.1.7[63]

Bloomfield states that the Gopatha Brahmana 'does not favour us with a report of the name of its author or authors. it is divided into two parts, the purva-brahmana in five prapathakas (chapters), and the uttara-brahmana in six prapathakas. The purva shows considerable originality, especially when it is engaged in the glorification of the Atharvan and its priests; this is indeed its main purpose. Its materials are by no means all of the usual Brahmana-character; they broach frequently upon the domain of Upanishad... The uttara has certainly some, though probably very few original sections'.[62]

S.S. Bahulkar states that the 'Gopatha Brahmana (GB.) is the only brahmana text of AV [AtharvaVeda], belonging to both the recensions [Shakhas], viz. Saunaka and Paippalada'.[64] Dalal agrees, stating the 'aim of this Brahmana seems to be to incorporate the Atharva [Veda] in the Vedic ritual, and bring it in line with the other three Vedas. This Brahmana is the same for the Paippalada and Shaunaka shakhas, and is the only existing Brahmana of the Artharva Veda'.[13] C. Majumdar states that 'although classed as a Brahmana, [it] really belongs to the Vedanga literature, and is a very late work'.[29]

Lost Brahmanas

M Haug states that there 'must have been, as we may learn from Panini and Patanjali's Mahabhasya, a much larger number of Brahmanas belonging to each Veda; and even Sayana, who lived only about four [now five] hundred years ago, was acquainted with more than we have now'.[7]

S. Shrava states that 'Innumerable manuscripts of the valuable [Vedic] literature have been lost due to atrocities of the rulers and invaders, ravages of time, and utter disregard and negligence. These factors contributed to the loss of hundreds of manuscripts. Once their number was more than a few hundred. Had these been available today the ambiguity in the interpretation of Vedic hymns could not have crept in'.[8] Based on references in other Sanskrit literature, Shrava lists many of these lost works:[8]

RigVeda

Brahmana Description
Paimgi, Paimgya, Paimgayani Also referred to as 'Madhuka' by the Brhaddevata. Referenced in other Sanskrit texts such as the Nidana Sutra, as well as the Kaushitaki, Shatapatha, and Aitareya Brahmanas.
Bahvricha Possibly a sub-division or recension related to the Mandukya Upanishad. Referenced in other Sanskrit texts such as the Apastamba Srauta Sutra, and in commentaries such as by Devapala on the Kathaka Grihya Sutra, and by Sabara on the Mimasa Darsana.
Asvalayana Possibly considered the same as the Aitareya Brahmana. Referenced by 'Raghunandana in the Malamasa Prakarana of his Smrititattva'.
Galava Brahmana One of the five Sakala recensions of the RigVeda. The sage Galava, who prepared the 'proper sequences of the readings from the RigVeda' was also known as Babhravya, and is mentioned in Sanskrit texts such as the Rikpratisakhya, Nirukta, and Brihaddevata.

SamaVeda

Brahmana Description
Bhallavi Recorded by the sage Bhallavi. 'A sruti of Bhallavi recension is available in Suresvara's Brihadaranyaka Upanishad' (219). Also referred to in Samkara's commentary on the Vedanta Sutra, amongst other Sanskrit works.
Kalabavi A recension of the SamaVeda. Quoted in works such as the Upagrantha Sutra.
Rauruki Referred to in works such as Gobhila Grihya Sutra and the commentary of Sayana on the Tamdya Brahmana (also known as the Panchavimsha Brahmana).
Satyayana Referred to by Jayadita.
Talavakara Recorded by the sage Telavakara. Possibly a recension of the Jaiminiya Brahmana or the same text named after a different Rishi.

YajurVeda

Brahmana Description
Charaka Main Brahmana of the Charaka recension of the YajurVeda. Similar to the Maitrayaniya Upanishad, referred to in works such as the commentary of Devaraja Yajva on the Nightantu.
Svetasvatara This is 'a sub-division of the Charakas according to Charanvyuha'. The Shvetashvatara Upanishad is from the Aranyaka of this Brahmana.
Kathaka This is 'a sub-division of the Charaka recension of [the] YajurVeda. Kathas were northern Charakas'. Referred to in works such as the Kathaka Samkalana. and portions have been published by Caland and Schroeder.
Maitrayani Recorded by the sage Maitrayani. Referred to in works such as the Baudhayana Srauta Sutra.
Jabala Recorded by Acharya Mahasala Satyakama Jabala, a disciple of Yajnavalkya (see also Jabala Upanishad).
Khandikeya A division of the Taittiriya school. Referenced by the Bhashika Sutra.
Aukheya Referred to in the Bhashika Sutra.
Haridravika Referred to in the commentary of Sayana on the RigVeda.
Tumburu Recension of both the YajurVeda and SamaVeda. Referred to in the Mahabhashya by Patañjali.
Ahvaraka This is 'a sub-division of the Charakas'. Referred to in works such as the Sampradaya Paddhati.
Kankati Referred to in the Apastamba Srauta Sutra.
Baral A division of the Mudgal. Referred to in works such as the Manava and Bharadvaja Sutra

|- |Chhagaleya |A division of the Taittiriya school. Referred to in works such as the Baudhayana Srauta Sutra. |}

Unknown

The Brahmanas listed below are often only mentioned by name in other texts without any further information such as what Veda they are attached to.

Brahmana Description
Aruneya Referred to in the Tantra Varttika.
Saulabha Possibly a recension of the RigVeda. Referred to in the Samkhyana Grihya Sutra, Asvalayana Grihya Sutra, and Kaushitaki Brahmana.
Sailali Referred to in the Apastamba Srauta Sutra.
Parasara Possibly a recension of the RigVeda. Referred to in the Mahabhasya.
Mashasaravi Referred to in works such as the Ganapatha by Pāṇini
Kapeya Referred to in the Satyashada Srauta Sutra.
Rahasyamnaya Referred to in the Smriti Ratnakara.
Nirukta Referred to in the Taittiriya Upanishad (see also the Nirukta).
Anvakhyana Referred to by Caland, who published extracts in the fourth volume of Acta Orientalia in 1926. This is available in German.[65]
Bashkala Referred to in a list of manuscripts in the library of Kavindracharya Saravati.
Mandukeya
Trikharvva Recensions mentioned by Sayana.
Karadvisha

Manuscripts and translations

RigVeda

Brahmana Sanskrit Transliteration English
Aitareya archive.org: version 1, version 2 TITUS (e-text) archive.org (M. Haug)
Kausitaki / Samkhyana Gretil (e-text) archive.org (A.B. Keith; includes the Aitareya Brahmana)

YajurVeda

Brahmana Sanskrit Transliteration English
Shatapatha (Mâdhyandina) archive.org: Part One, Two, and Three Gretil (e-text): Part One, Two, Three, Four Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve (N/A), Thirteen, Fourteen Sacred-Texts.com (e-texts)
Vedavid.org (e-text)

TITUS (e-text)

Archive,org: Part One, Two, Three, Four, and Five
Shatapatha (Kanva)
Taittiriya archive.org: version 1, version 2 TITUS (e-text) SAKSHI: Volume 1, Volume 2
Taittiriya Chardi
Vadhula - Anvakhyana archive.org

AtharvaVeda

Brahmana Sanskrit Transliteration English
Gopatha archive.org: version 1 (Complete Works of Jibananda Vidyasagara),

version 2 (Rajendralala Mitra and Harachandra Vidyabhushana)

Gretil (e-text)

TITUS (e-text)

Shodhganga (C.G. Kashikar)

Lost Brahmanas (fragments)

Brahmanas English
Ahvaraka, Kaukati, Kalabavi, Caraka, Chagaleya, Jabali, Jaiminya, Pamgayanu, Bhallavi, Masasaravi, Maitrayaniya, Rauruki, Satyayana, Sailali, Svetasvatara, and Haridravika. archive.org (B. Ghosh)

See also

References

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  3. ^ Michael Witzel, "Tracing the Vedic dialects" in Dialectes dans les litteratures Indo-Aryennes ed. Caillat, Paris, 1989, 97–265.
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  65. ^ Konow, Sten (1926). Acta Orientalia (Volume IV). pp. 35.

brahmana, this, article, about, hindu, theological, texts, similar, words, brahman, disambiguation, ɑː, sanskrit, मणम, brāhmaṇam, vedic, śruti, works, attached, samhitas, hymns, mantras, sama, yajur, atharva, vedas, they, secondary, layer, classification, sans. This article is about the Hindu theological texts For similar words see Brahman disambiguation The Brahmanas ˈ b r ɑː m e n e z Sanskrit ब र ह मणम Brahmaṇam are Vedic sruti works attached to the Samhitas hymns and mantras of the Rig Sama Yajur and Atharva Vedas They are a secondary layer or classification of Sanskrit texts embedded within each Veda which explain and instruct on the performance of Vedic rituals in which the related Samhitas are recited In addition to explaining the symbolism and meaning of the Samhitas Brahmana literature also expounds scientific knowledge of the Vedic Period including observational astronomy and particularly in relation to altar construction geometry Divergent in nature some Brahmanas also contain mystical and philosophical material that constitutes Aranyakas and Upanishads 1 A 17th century manuscript page of Sadvimsha Brahmana a Pancaviṃsa Brahmaṇa supplement Sanskrit Devanagari It is found embedded in the Samaveda Each Veda has one or more of its own Brahmanas and each Brahmana is generally associated with a particular Shakha or Vedic school Less than twenty Brahmanas are currently extant as most have been lost or destroyed Dating of the final codification of the Brahmanas and associated Vedic texts is controversial as they were likely recorded after several centuries of oral transmission 2 The oldest Brahmana is dated to about 900 BCE while the youngest are dated to around 700 BCE 3 4 Contents 1 Nomenclature and etymology 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Synonyms 2 Overview 2 1 Performance of rituals 2 2 The Nirukta 2 3 Commentaries of Sayana 2 4 Abbreviations and schools 2 5 Recensions by Disciples of Vyasa 3 RigVeda 3 1 Aitareya Brahmana 3 2 Kausitaki Samkhyana Brahmana 3 2 1 Kaushitaki Brahmana Upanishad 4 SamaVeda 4 1 Panchavimsha Tandya Brahmana 4 1 1 Sadvimsa Brahmana 4 1 1 1 Adbhuta Brahmana 4 2 Samavidhana Brahmana 4 3 Daivata Brahmana 4 4 Samhitopanishad Brahmana 4 5 Arsheya Brahmana 4 6 Vamsha Brahmana 4 7 Jaiminiya Brahmana 4 7 1 Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana 4 7 2 Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana 4 8 Chandogya Brahmana 4 8 1 Mantra Brahmana 5 YajurVeda 5 1 Sukla White YajurVeda Shatapatha Brahmana 5 2 Krishna Black YajurVeda Taittiriya Brahmana 5 2 1 Taittiriya Chardi 5 2 2 Taittiriya Pravargya 5 3 Vadhula Anvakhyana 6 AtharvaVeda 6 1 Gopatha Brahmana 7 Lost Brahmanas 7 1 RigVeda 7 2 SamaVeda 7 3 YajurVeda 7 4 Unknown 8 Manuscripts and translations 8 1 RigVeda 8 2 YajurVeda 8 3 AtharvaVeda 8 4 Lost Brahmanas fragments 9 See also 10 ReferencesNomenclature and etymology EditBrahmana or Brahmaṇam Sanskrit ब र ह मणम can be loosely translated as explanations of sacred knowledge or doctrine or Brahmanical explanation 5 According to the Monier Williams Sanskrit dictionary Brahmana means 6 Explanations of sacred knowledge or doctrine especially for the use of the Brahmans in their sacrifices The Brahmaṇa portion of the Veda as distinct from its Mantra and Upanishad portion and consisting of a class of works called Brahmaṇas they contain rules for the employment of the Mantras or hymns at various sacrifices with detailed explanations of their origin and meaning and numerous old legends According to Sayaṇa to contain two parts 1 vidhi rules or directions for sacrificial rites and 2 artha vada explanatory remarks Etymology Edit M Haug states that etymologically the word Brahmana or Brahmanam is derived from brahman which properly signifies the Brahma priest who must know all Vedas and understand the whole course and meaning of the sacrifice the dictum of such a Brahma priest who passed as a great authority was called a Brahmanam 7 Synonyms Edit S Shrava states that synonyms of the word Brahmana include 8 Vyakhyana In Brahmana works such as the Shatapatha Brahmana 6 7 4 6 9 the word vyakhyana also is a synonym of the commonly used word brahmana Definitions of Vyakhyana व य ख य न include explaining exposition elucidation expounding interpretation and lecture 10 Pravachana Another synonym of the brahmana word is pravachana Definitions of Pravachana प रवचन include expounding teaching exposition and oral instruction 11 Vijnayate Is used to denote a reference from a brahmana work The word has first of all been used in the Gopatha Brahmana Definitions of Vijnayate include It is a fact that and be distinguished or discerned 12 Overview Edit Performance of Yajna R Dalal states that the Brahmanas are texts attached to the Samhitas hymns Rig Sama Yajur and Atharva Vedas and provide explanations of these and guidance for the priests in sacrificial rituals 13 S Shri elaborates stating Brahmanas explain the hymns of the Samhitas and are in both prose and verse form The Brahmanas are divided into Vidhi and Arthavada Vidhi are commands in the performance of Vedic sacrifices and Arthavada praises the rituals the glory of the Devas and so on The belief in reincarnation and transmigration of soul started with the Brahmanas The Brahmana period ends around 500 BC E with the emergence of Buddhism and it overlaps the period of Aranyakas Sutras Smritis and the first Upanishads 14 M Haug states that the Veda or scripture of the Brahmans consists according to the opinion of the most eminent divines of Hindustan of two principal parts viz Mantra Samhita and Brahmanam Each of the four Vedas Rik Yajus Saman and Atharvan has a Mantra as well as a Brahmana portion The difference between both may be briefly stated as follows That part which contains the sacred prayers the invocations of the different deities the sacred verses for chanting at the sacrifices the sacrificial formulas is called Mantra The Brahmanam part always presupposes the Mantra for without the latter it would have no meaning they contain speculations on the meaning of the mantras gives precepts for their application relates stories of their origin and explains the secret meaning of the latter 7 J Eggeling states that While the Brahmanas are thus our oldest sources from which a comprehensive view of the sacrificial ceremonial can be obtained they also throw a great deal of light on the earliest metaphysical and linguistic speculations of the Hindus Another even more interesting feature of these works consists in the numerous legends scattered through them From the archaic style in which these mythological tales are generally composed as well as from the fact that not a few of them are found in Brahmanas of different schools and Vedas though often with considerable variations it is pretty evident that the ground work of many of them goes back to times preceding the composition of the Brahmanas 15 The Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts IGNCA states that while the Upanishads speculate on the nature of the universe and the relationship of the one and the many the immanent and transcendental the Brahmanas make concrete the world view and the concepts through a highly developed system of ritual yajna This functions as a strategy for a continuous reminder of the inter relatedness of man and nature the five elements and the sources of energy 16 Performance of rituals Edit The Brahmanas are particularly noted for their instructions on the proper performance of rituals as well as explanations on the symbolic importance of sacred words and ritual actions 17 Academics such as P Alper K Klostermaier and F M Muller state that these instructions insist on exact pronunciation accent 18 chhandas छन द meters precise pitch with coordinated movement of hand and fingers that is perfect delivery 19 20 Klostermaier adds that the Satapatha Brahamana for example states that verbal perfection made a mantra infallible while one mistake made it powerless 19 Scholars suggest that this orthological perfection preserved Vedas in an age when writing technology was not in vogue and the voluminous collection of Vedic knowledge were taught to and memorized by dedicated students through Svadhyaya then remembered and verbally transmitted from one generation to the next 19 21 It seems breaking silence too early in at least one ritual is permissible in the Satapatha 1 1 4 9 where in that case mutter some Rik RigVeda or Yagus text YajurVeda addressed to Vishnu for Vishnu is the sacrifice so that he thereby regains obtains a hold on the sacrifice and penance is there by done by him 22 The Nirukta Edit Recorded by the grammarian Yaska the Nirukta one of the six Vedangas or limbs of the Vedas concerned with correct etymology and interpretation of the Vedas references several Brahmanas to do so These are grouped by Veda 23 Veda Brahmana CommentRigVeda Aitareya and KausitakiSamaVeda Sadvimsa Mantra and Daivata The Mantra Brahmana is from the first two chapters of the Chandogya Brahmana YajurVeda Shatapatha There are two versions or recensions by different Shakhas Madhyandina and Kanva Both apply to the Sukla White YajurVeda Taittiriya Applies to the Krishna Black YajurVedaAtharvaVeda Gopatha The only surviving i e extant Brahmana of this Veda Commentaries of Sayana Edit The 14th Century Sanskrit scholar Sayana composed numerous commentaries on Vedic literature including the Samhitas Brahmanas Aranyakas and Upanishads B R Modak states that king Bukka 1356 1377 CE requested his preceptor and minister Madhavacharya to write a commentary on the Vedas so that even common people would be able to understand the meaning of the Vedic Mantras Madhavacharya told him that his younger brother Sayana was a learned person and hence he should be entrusted with the task 24 Modak also lists the Brahmanas commented upon by Sayana with the exception of the Gopatha 24 Veda Brahmana CommentRigVeda AitareyaSamaVeda Panchavimsha Sadvimsa Samavidhana Arsheya Daivata Chandogya Samhitopanishad Vamsha All 8 Brahmanas are of the Kauthuma Shakha YajurVeda Taittirita Shatapatha Madhyandina recension AtharvaVeda Gopatha See the main article on the Gopatha Brahmana Note It seems only a few commentaries of Sayana have been translated into English Abbreviations and schools Edit For ease of reference academics often use common abbreviations to refer to particular Brahmanas and other Vedic post Vedic e g Puranas and Sanskrit literature Additionally particular Brahmanas linked to particular Vedas are also linked to i e recorded by particular Shakhas or schools of those Vedas as well Based on the abbreviations and Shakhas provided by works cited in this article and other texts by Bloomfield Keith W D Whitney and H W Tull 25 26 27 28 extant Brahmanas have been listed below grouped by Veda and Shakha Note that indicates the abbreviation or school has not been provided or found There are variations of how the translated names of Vedas Shakhas and Brahmanas are spelt Lost or fragmentary Brahmanas e g the Kathaka Brahmana KathB have not been listed see the section of Lost Brahmanas below RigVeda SamaVeda YajurVedaa AtharvaVedaName Abbreviation Shakha Name Abbreviation Shakha Name Abbreviation Shakha Name Abbreviation ShakhaAitareya AB AiB Shakala Panchavimshac PB Kuthuma Ranayaniya Tandin Shatapathaf SB CB Madhyandina Gopatha GB Paippalada and ShaunakaKausitaki Samkhyanab KB Baskala Tandyac TMB PB Shatapathaf SBM MSB CBSadvimsac SB SadvB Kauthuma Shatapathaf SBK CBK KanvaAdbhutac AdB Taittiriya TB TaittiriyaSamavidhana Svidh SVB Taittiriya Chardi PravargyagDaivatad DB Vadhula Anvakhyanah VadhAnva VadhulaSamhitopanishad Samhitopanisad BArsheya Vamsha VBChandogyae Mantrae MB SMBJaiminiya JB Jaim Br JaiminiyaJaiminiya Arsheya a The Sukla White YajurVeda referred to by the Shatapatha Brahmana is the Vajasaneyi Samhita Madhyandina recension VS Vag S Kanva recension VSK The Krishna Black YajurVeda referred to by the Taittiriya Brahmana is the Taittiriya Samhita TS b The Kausitaki and Samkhyana are generally considered to be the same Brahmana Also called the Cankhayana Brahmana 27 c The Panchavismsha and Tandya are the same Brahmana The Sadvimsa Brahmana is considered to be an appendix to the Panchavismsha Tandya Brahmana The Adbhuta Brahmana is from the last part of the Sadvimsa Brahmana and deals with omens and supernatural things 29 Attributed by Caland to the Kuthuma Ranayaniya Shakha 30 but by Macdonell to the Tandin Shakha 31 d Also called the Devatadhyaya Brahmana e The Mantra Brahmana also called the Samaveda Mantrabrahmana SMB is from the first two chapters of the Chandogya Brahmana also called the Chandogyaopanishad and the Upanishad Brahmana the remaining chapters of the Chandogya Brahmana form the Chandogya Upanishad f Also called the Catapatha Brahmana CB this abbreviation also denotes the Madhyandina recension g Part of the Taittiriya Aranyaka explains the Pravargya rite Generally not considered a Brahmana proper although it has been published as one 32 h Linked with the Krishna Black YajurVeda it is actually part of the Vadhula Shrauta Sutra 13 Recensions by Disciples of Vyasa Edit S Sharva states that in the brahmana literature this word brahmana has been commonly used as detailing the ritualism related to the different sacrifices or yajnas The known recensions i e schools or Shakhas of the Vedas all had separate brahmanas Most of these brahmanas are not extant Panini differentiates between the old and the new brahmanas he asked Was it when Krishna Dvaipayana Vyasa had propounded the Vedic recensions The brahmanas which had been propounded prior to the exposition of recensions by Vyasa were called as old brahmanas and those which had been expounded by his disciples were known as new brahmanas 8 RigVeda EditThe Aitareya Kausitaki and Samkhyana Brahmanas are the two or three known extant Brahmanas of the RigVeda A B Keith a translator of the Aitareya and Kausitaki Brahmanas states that it is almost certainly the case that these two Kausitaki and Samkhyana Brahmanas represent for us the development of a single tradition and that there must have been a time when there existed a single text from which they were developed and diverged 33 Although S Shrava considers the Kausitaki and Samkhyana Brahmanas to be separate although very similar works 8 M Haug considers them to be the same work referred to by different names 7 Aitareya Brahmana Edit Main article Aitareya Brahmana The sun does never set nor rise When people think the sun is setting it is not so For after having arrived at the end of the day it makes itself produce two opposite effects making night to what is below and day to what is on the other side Having reached the end of the night it makes itself produce two opposite effects making day to what is below and night to what is on the other side In fact the sun never sets Nor does it set for him who has such a knowledge Such a one becomes united with the sun assumes its form and enters its place Aitareya Brahmanam of the RigVeda translated by Martin Haug 1922 Book 3 Chapter 4 Section 44 34 Page from the Aitareya Brahmana As detailed in the main article the Aitareya Brahmana AB is ascribed to the sage Mahidasa Aitareya of the Shakala Shakha Shakala school of the Rigveda and is estimated to have been recorded around 600 400 BCE 33 It is also linked with the Ashvalayana Shakha 13 The text itself consists of eight pancikas books each containing five adhyayas chapters totalling forty in all C Majumdar states that it deals principally with the great Soma sacrifices and the different ceremonies of royal inauguration 29 Haug states that the legend about this Brahmana as told by Sayana is that the name Aitareya is by Indian tradition traced to Itara An ancient Risi had among his many wives one who was called Itara She had a son Mahidasa by name i e Mahidasa Aitareya The Risi preferred the sons of his other wives to Mahidasa and went even so far as to insult him once by placing all his other children in his lap to his exclusion His mother grieved at this ill treatment of her son prayed to her family deity Kuladevata and the Earth Bhumi who appeared in her celestial form in the midst of the assembly placed him on a throne simhasana and gave him as a token of honour for his surpassing all other children in learning a boon vara which had the appearance of a Brahmana i e the Aitareya 7 P Deussen agrees relating the same story 35 Notably The story itself is remarkably similar to the legend of a Vaishnava boy called Dhruva in the Puranas e g Bhagavata Purana Canto 4 Chapter 8 12 36 Kausitaki Samkhyana Brahmana Edit The gods and the Asuras were in conflict over these worlds From them Agni departed and entered the seasons The gods having been victorious and having slain the Asuras sought for him Yama and Varuna discerned him Him the gods invited him they instructed to him they offered a boon He chose this as a boon Give me the fore offering and the after offerings for my own and the ghee of the waters and make of plants Therefore they say Agni s are the fore offerings and the after offerings Agni s is the butter Then indeed did the gods prosper the Asuras were defeated He prospers himself his foe is defeated who knows thus Rigveda Brahmanas The Aitareya And Kausitaki Brahmanas Of The Rigveda translated by Arthur Berriedale Keith 1920 Kausitaki Brahmana Adhyaya I Verse 2 33 Tools used for Yajna The Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts IGNCA states that the Kaushitaki Brahmana is associated with Baskala Shakha of the Rigveda and is also called Sankhyayana Brahmana It is divided into thirty chapters adhyayas and 226 Khanda s The first six chapters dealing with food sacrifice and the remaining to Soma sacrifice This work is ascribed to Sankhyayana or Kaushitaki 37 S Shrava disagrees stating that it was once considered that the Kaushitaki or Samkhayana was the name of the same brahmana but the Samkhayana differs though slightly from the Kaushitaki Brahmana 8 C Majumdar states that it deals not only with the Soma but also other sacrifices 29 Keith estimates that the Kaisitaki Brahmana was recorded around 600 400 BCE adding that it is more scientific and logical than the Aitareya Brahmana although much of the material of the Kausitaki and especially the legends has been taken over by the Brahmana from a source common to it and the Aitareya but the whole has been worked up into a harmonious unity which presents no such irregularities as are found in the Aitareya It is clearly a redaction of the tradition of the school made deliberately after the redaction of the Aitareya 33 Kaushitaki Brahmana Upanishad Edit Max Muller states that the Kaushitaki Upanishad also called the Kaushitaki Brahmana Upanishad KBU does not form part of the Kaushitaki brahmana in 30 adhyayas which we possess and we must therefore account for its name by admitting that the Aranyaka of which it formed a portion could be reckoned as part of the Brahmana literature of the Rig veda see Aitareya aranyaka Introduction p xcii and that hence the Upanishad might be called the Upanishad of the Brahmana of the Kaushitakins 38 SamaVeda EditW Caland states that of the SamaVeda three Shakhas schools or branches are to be distinguished that of the Kauthumas that of the Ranayaniyas and that of the Jaiminiyas 39 Panchavimsha Tandya Brahmana Edit Main article Panchavimsha Brahmana Visnu is the sacrifice what here on this day is not brought about that he brings about through Vishnu who is the sacrifice Pancavimsa Brahmana translated by W Caland 1931 Prapathaka XIII 13 Adhyaya 5 Verse 5 40 Caland states that the Panchavimsha Tandya Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha consists of 25 prapathakas books or chapters 39 C Majumdar states that it is one of the oldest and most important of Brahmanas It contains many old legends and includes the Vratyastoma a ceremony by which people of non Aryan stock could be admitted into the Aryan family 29 Sadvimsa Brahmana Edit Sadvimsha Brahmana page The Sadvimsa Brahmana is also of the Kauthuma Shakha and consists of 5 adhyayas lessons or chapters Caland states it is a kind of appendix to the Panchavimsha Brahmana reckoned as its 26th book or chapter The text clearly intends to supplement the Pancavimsabrahmana hence its desultory character It treats of the Subrahmanya formula of the one day rites that are destined to injure abhicara and other matters This brahmana at least partly is presupposed by the Arseyakalpa and the Sutrakaras 39 Adbhuta Brahmana Edit Caland states that the Adbhuta Brahmana also of the Kauthuma Shakha is the latest part i e 5th adhyaya of the Sadvimsa Brahmana that which treats of Omina and Portenta Omens and Divination 39 Majumdar agrees 29 Samavidhana Brahmana Edit Caland states that the Samavidhana Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is in 3 prapathakas books or chapters its aim is to explain how by chanting various samans hymns of the SamaVeda 41 some end may be attained It is probably older than one of the oldest dharmasastras that of Gautama 39 Daivata Brahmana Edit Page from the SamaVeda samhita and brahmanam Caland states that the Daivata Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is in 3 prapathakas books or chapters It deals with the deities to which the samans are addressed 39 Dalal adds that the first part of the Devatadhyaya is the most important as it provides rules to determine the deities to whom the samans are dedicated Another section ascribes colours to different verses probably as aids to memory or for meditation It includes some very late passages such as references to the four yugas or ages 13 Samhitopanishad Brahmana Edit Caland states that the Samhitopanishad Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is in 5 khandas books It treats of the effects of recitation the relation of the saman hymns of the SamaVeda and the words on which it is chanted the daksinas to be given to the religious teacher 39 Dalal agrees stating that it describes the nature of the chants and their effects and how the riks or Rig Vedic verses were converted into samans Thus it reveals some of the hidden aspects of the Sama Veda 13 Arsheya Brahmana Edit Caland states that the Arsheya Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is in 3 prapathakas books or chapters This quasi brahmana is on the whole nothing more than an anukramanika a mere list of the names of the samans hymns of the SamaVeda occurring in the first two ganas of the Kauthumas i e the Gramegeya gana Veya gana and the Aramyegeya gana Aranya gana 39 The nature of the ganas noted are discussed in the same text As illustrated below this Brahmana is virtually identical to the Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana of the Jaiminiya Shakha Vamsha Brahmana Edit Caland states that the Vamsha Brahmana of the Kauthuma Shakha is in 3 khandas books it contains the lists of teachers of the Samaveda 39 Notably Dalal adds that of the 53 teachers listed the earliest teacher Kashyapa is said to have received the teaching from the god Agni 13 Jaiminiya Brahmana Edit He should proceed thus Having taken a water pot or a water jar he should go pouring it out from the garhapatya to the ahavaniya with the verse Here Visnu strode The rc RigVeda verse e g 1 22 17 is a divine purification water is a divine purification Whatever here is unappeased of the sacrifice and whatever is impure for all that water forms the means of appeasing So by water they appease it Jaiminya Brahmana translated by Hendrik Bodewitz 1973 Book 1 Section 52 Vehicles or animals pass between the fires 42 43 Page form the Mimamsa sutra of Jaiminimi who also recorded the Jaiminiya Brahmana and other works 44 It seems that this Brahmana has not been fully translated to date or at least a full translation has not been made available S Shrava states that the Jaiminiya Brahmana of the Jaiminiya Shakha also called the Talavakara Brahmana is divided into 1348 khandas verses Many of the sentences of this brahmana are similar to those found in Tamdya Sadavimsam Satapatha Brahmanas and the Taittirya Samhita Krishna Black YajurVeda Many of the hymns are found for the first time in it Their composition is different from that available in Vedic literature Most of the subjects described in it are completely new and are not found in other bramanas like Tamdya etc In the beginning khandas details of daily oblation to the sacrificial fire are described This brahmana was compiled by Jaimini a famous preceptor of Samaveda and the worthy disciple of Krishna Dvaipayana Vedavyasa and his disciple Talavakara 8 Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana Edit Dalal states that the Jaiminiya Arsheya Brahmana of the Jaiminiya Shakha is similar to the Arsheya Brahmana of the Kauthuma school but for the fact that the names of the rishis in the two are different Unlike the Kauthuma texts this lists only one rishi per saman 13 Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana Edit Main article Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana As detailed in the main article also called the Talavakara Upanishad Brahmana and Jaiminiyopanishad Brahmana it is considered an Aranyaka not a Brahmana and forms part of the Kena Upanishad Chandogya Brahmana Edit Now that light which shines above this heaven higher than all higher than everything in the highest world beyond which there are no other worlds that is the same light which is within man Chandogya Upanishad edited by F M Muller 1879 Prapathaka 3 Prapathaka 5 of the Chandogya Brahmana Khanda 13 Verse 7 45 The Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts IGNCA states that the Chandogya Brahmana also called the chanddogyopanishad Brahmana is divided into ten prapathakas chapters Its first two prapathakas chapters form the Mantra Brahmana MB and each of them is divided into eight khandas sections Prapathakas 3 10 form the Chandogya Upanishad 46 K G Witz states it is of the Kauthuma Shakha see below 47 Mantra Brahmana Edit ad etad dhridayam tava tad astu hridayam mama Yad idam hridayam mama tad astu hridayam tava That heart of thine shall be mine and this heart of mine shall be thine Mantra Brahmana transliteration and translation of Chapter 1 Sukta 3 48 K G Witz states that the Mantra Brahmana is a text in two chapters which mostly give Vedic Mantras which should be used in rites such as for birth and marriage The combined text with 8 chapters forming the Chandogya Upanishad is also called the Upanishad Brahmana and is one of the eight canonical Brahmanas of the Kauthumas The fact that the Upanishad was combined with the Mantra Brahmana into a single text is significant Just as everyone in society is blessed and made part of the overall divine societal social and world order by the household rites in the Mantra Brahmana so everyone can direct his life toward the Infinite Reality by the numerous upasanas and vidyas of the Chandogya Upanishad 47 R Mitra is quoted as stating that of the two portions differ greatly and judged by them they appear to be productions of very different ages though both are evidently relics of pretty remote antiquity Of the two chapters of the Khandogya Brahmana Chandogya Brahmana forming the Mantra Brahmana the first includes eight suktas hymns on the ceremony of marriage and the rites necessary to be observed at the birth of a child The first Sukta is intended to be recited when offering an oblation to Agni on the occasion of a marriage and its object is to pray for prosperity on behalf of the married couple The second prays for a long life kind relatives and a numerous progeny i e children The third is the marriage pledge by which the couple bind themselves to each other Its spirit may be guessed from a single verse In talking of the unanimity with which they will dwell the bridegroom addresses his bride That heart of thine shall be mine and this heart of mine shall be thine as quoted above 49 YajurVeda EditSukla White YajurVeda Shatapatha Brahmana Edit Main article Shatapatha Brahmanatarhi videgho mathava asa sarasvatyaṃ sa tata eva praṅdahannabhiyayemam pṛthiviṃ taṃ gotamasca rahugaṇo videghasca mathavaḥ pascaddahantamanviyatuḥ sa imaḥ sarva nadiratidadaha sadaniretyuttaradgirernirghavati taṃ haiva natidadaha taṃ ha sma tam pura brahmaṇa na tarantyanatidagdhagnina vaisvanareṇeti Mathava the Videgha was at that time on the river Sarasvati He Agni thence went burning along this earth towards the east and Gotama Rahugana and the Videgha Mathava followed after him as he was burning along He burnt over dried up all these rivers Now that river which is called Sadanira flows from the northern Himalaya mountain that one he did not burn over That one the Brahmans did not cross in former times thinking it has not been burnt over by Agni Vaisvanara Satapatha Brahmnana transliteration of Kanda I Adhyaya IV Brahmana I Verse 14 50 Satapatha Brahmana translation by Julius Eggeling 1900 Kanda I Adhyaya IV Brahmana I Verse 14 51 Extract from a 13th century manuscript of the Shatapatha Brahmana Khanda 14 As detailed in the main article the final form of the Satapatha Brahmana is estimated to have been recorded around 1000 800 BCE although it refers to astronomical phenomena dated to 2100 BCE and as quoted above historical events such as the Sarasvati river drying up believed to have occurred around 1900 BCE 52 It provides scientific knowledge of geometry and observational astronomy from the Vedic period and is considered significant in the development of Vaishnavism as the possible origin of several Puranic legends and avatars of the RigVedic god Vishnu all of which Matsya Kurma Varaha Narasimha and Vamana are listed in the Dashavatara M Winternitz states that this Brahmana is the best known the most extensive and doubtless also on account of its contents the most important of all the Brahmanas 1 Eggeling states that The Brahmana of the Vagasaneyins bears the name of Satapatha that is the Brahmana of a hundred paths because it consists of a hundred lectures adhyayas Both the Vagasaneyi samhita YajurVeda and the Satapatha brahmana have come down to us in two different recensions those of the Madhyandina and the Kanva schools 15 Madhyandina recension Ascribed to Yajnavalkya Vajasaneya it consists of 14 khandas books which can be divided into two major parts The first nine khandas are commentaries of the corresponding samhita of the Sukla white Yajurveda The final five khandas cover supplementary and ritualistically newer material and the final book constitutes the Bṛhad Araṇyaka Upaniṣad 15 Kanva recension Ascribed to Samkara it consists of 17 khandas The IGNCA adds that the division of Kandika verses is more rational in the Kanva text than in the other The name Satapatha as Eggeling has suggested might have been based on the number of Adhyayas chapters in the Madhyandina which is exactly one hundred But the Kanva recension which has one hundred and four Adhyayas is also known by the same name In Indian tradition words like sata and sahasra indicating numbers do not always stand for exact numbers 16 Krishna Black YajurVeda Taittiriya Brahmana Edit Main article Taittiriya Brahmana When the completion of yajna does not happen in a year samvatsara then everything is not stable Then one has to seek the grace of Vishnu Vamana by performing a special rite on the ekadashi day Yajna means Vishnu worshipping Vishnu They perform yajna only for stabilising They depend on Indra and Agni Indra and Agni give the abode for Gods devas Devas only seek shelter in them and only depend on them Taittiriya Brahmana translated by R L Kashyap 2017 Ashtaka 1 Prapathaka 2 Anuvaka 5 Verses 1 7 53 Page of the Taittiriya Samhita Ascribed to the sage Tittiri or Taittiri the Taittiriya Brahmana of the Taittiriya Shakha consists of three Ashtakas books or parts of commentaries on the performance of Vedic sacrificial rituals astronomy and information about the gods It is stated by the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts IGNCA to be mixed of mantras and Brahmans composed in poetic and prose manner 54 M Winternitz adds that the Taittiriya Brahmana of the Black YajurVeda is nothing but a continuation of the Taittiriya Samhita for the Brahmanas were already included in the Samhitas of the Black YajurVeda The Taittiriya Brahmana therefore contains only later additions to the Samhita 1 According to the Monier Williams Sanskrit Dictionary Taittiri was a disciple of Yaska 300 400 BCE 55 although according to the Vishnu Purana Book 3 Chapter 5 Taittiri and Yaska were disciples of Vaisampayana 500 600 BCE 56 According to H H Wilson in the Anukramani index of the black YajurVeda it is there said that Vaisampayana taught it to Yaska who taught it to Tittiri who also became a teacher whence the term Taittiriya for a grammatical rule explains it to mean The Taittiriyas are those who read what was said or repeated by Tittiri 57 Taittiriya Chardi Edit Although the Taittiriya Chardi Brahmana is mentioned i e listed by academics such as S Shri 14 and S N Nair 58 no further information could be found Taittiriya Pravargya Edit Main article Pravargya The Taittiriya Pravargya is a commentary on the Pravargya ritual contained in the Taittiriya Aranyaka This is not listed or referred to as a Brahmana in the works cited Vadhula Anvakhyana Edit Dalal states that the Vadhula or Anvakhyana Brahmana of the Vadhula Shakha is a Brahmana type of text though it is actually part of the Vadhula Shrauta Sutra 13 However B B Chaubey states that about the nature of the text there has been confusion whether VadhAnva Vadhula Anvakhyana Brahmana is a Brahmana or an Anubrahmana work resembling a brahmana or according to the brahmana 59 or an Anvakhyana explanation keeping close to the text or minute account or statement 60 When Caland found some newly discovered MSS manuscript of the Vadhula School he was not sure about the nature of the text Because of the composite nature of the MS manuscript he took the text as part of the Srautasurta of the Vadhulas However he was not unaware of the Brahmanic character of the text according to Caland the word Anvakhyana was given as a specific name to the Brahmanas or Brahmana like passages of the Vadhulasutra 61 AtharvaVeda EditAccording to M Bloomfield the following 9 shakhas schools or branches of the AtharvaVeda are the 62 Paippalada Paippaladaka Paippaladi Pippalada or Paopalayana A patronymic derived from the name of a teacher Pippaladi Tauda Taudayana Stauda or Staudayana There is nothing to the real history of the name Mauda or Maydayana Saunakiya Saunaka or Saunakin Jajala The acarya eponymous of the school seems to have been Jajali as reported by the Mahabhasya Jalada or Jaladayana Brahmavada Devadarsa or Devadarsin CaranavaidyaGopatha Brahmana Edit Main article Gopatha Brahmana These waters which having encircled the seed the ocean rested into it those waters flowed together towards the east south west and north In that those waters flowed together towards it therefore it is called samudra ocean Frightened they said to the lord alone may we choose as King And in that having encircled the ocean rested into it that became Varana Him who is really Varana they call mystically Varuna Gods are fond of mystical presentation as it were and haters of direct presentation Gopatha Brahmana translated by H C Patyal 1969 Prapathaka I 1 7 63 Atharva Veda samhita page Bloomfield states that the Gopatha Brahmana does not favour us with a report of the name of its author or authors it is divided into two parts the purva brahmana in five prapathakas chapters and the uttara brahmana in six prapathakas The purva shows considerable originality especially when it is engaged in the glorification of the Atharvan and its priests this is indeed its main purpose Its materials are by no means all of the usual Brahmana character they broach frequently upon the domain of Upanishad The uttara has certainly some though probably very few original sections 62 S S Bahulkar states that the Gopatha Brahmana GB is the only brahmana text of AV AtharvaVeda belonging to both the recensions Shakhas viz Saunaka and Paippalada 64 Dalal agrees stating the aim of this Brahmana seems to be to incorporate the Atharva Veda in the Vedic ritual and bring it in line with the other three Vedas This Brahmana is the same for the Paippalada and Shaunaka shakhas and is the only existing Brahmana of the Artharva Veda 13 C Majumdar states that although classed as a Brahmana it really belongs to the Vedanga literature and is a very late work 29 Lost Brahmanas EditM Haug states that there must have been as we may learn from Panini and Patanjali s Mahabhasya a much larger number of Brahmanas belonging to each Veda and even Sayana who lived only about four now five hundred years ago was acquainted with more than we have now 7 S Shrava states that Innumerable manuscripts of the valuable Vedic literature have been lost due to atrocities of the rulers and invaders ravages of time and utter disregard and negligence These factors contributed to the loss of hundreds of manuscripts Once their number was more than a few hundred Had these been available today the ambiguity in the interpretation of Vedic hymns could not have crept in 8 Based on references in other Sanskrit literature Shrava lists many of these lost works 8 RigVeda Edit Brahmana DescriptionPaimgi Paimgya Paimgayani Also referred to as Madhuka by the Brhaddevata Referenced in other Sanskrit texts such as the Nidana Sutra as well as the Kaushitaki Shatapatha and Aitareya Brahmanas Bahvricha Possibly a sub division or recension related to the Mandukya Upanishad Referenced in other Sanskrit texts such as the Apastamba Srauta Sutra and in commentaries such as by Devapala on the Kathaka Grihya Sutra and by Sabara on the Mimasa Darsana Asvalayana Possibly considered the same as the Aitareya Brahmana Referenced by Raghunandana in the Malamasa Prakarana of his Smrititattva Galava Brahmana One of the five Sakala recensions of the RigVeda The sage Galava who prepared the proper sequences of the readings from the RigVeda was also known as Babhravya and is mentioned in Sanskrit texts such as the Rikpratisakhya Nirukta and Brihaddevata SamaVeda Edit Brahmana DescriptionBhallavi Recorded by the sage Bhallavi A sruti of Bhallavi recension is available in Suresvara s Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 219 Also referred to in Samkara s commentary on the Vedanta Sutra amongst other Sanskrit works Kalabavi A recension of the SamaVeda Quoted in works such as the Upagrantha Sutra Rauruki Referred to in works such as Gobhila Grihya Sutra and the commentary of Sayana on the Tamdya Brahmana also known as the Panchavimsha Brahmana Satyayana Referred to by Jayadita Talavakara Recorded by the sage Telavakara Possibly a recension of the Jaiminiya Brahmana or the same text named after a different Rishi YajurVeda Edit Brahmana DescriptionCharaka Main Brahmana of the Charaka recension of the YajurVeda Similar to the Maitrayaniya Upanishad referred to in works such as the commentary of Devaraja Yajva on the Nightantu Svetasvatara This is a sub division of the Charakas according to Charanvyuha The Shvetashvatara Upanishad is from the Aranyaka of this Brahmana Kathaka This is a sub division of the Charaka recension of the YajurVeda Kathas were northern Charakas Referred to in works such as the Kathaka Samkalana and portions have been published by Caland and Schroeder Maitrayani Recorded by the sage Maitrayani Referred to in works such as the Baudhayana Srauta Sutra Jabala Recorded by Acharya Mahasala Satyakama Jabala a disciple of Yajnavalkya see also Jabala Upanishad Khandikeya A division of the Taittiriya school Referenced by the Bhashika Sutra Aukheya Referred to in the Bhashika Sutra Haridravika Referred to in the commentary of Sayana on the RigVeda Tumburu Recension of both the YajurVeda and SamaVeda Referred to in the Mahabhashya by Patanjali Ahvaraka This is a sub division of the Charakas Referred to in works such as the Sampradaya Paddhati Kankati Referred to in the Apastamba Srauta Sutra Baral A division of the Mudgal Referred to in works such as the Manava and Bharadvaja Sutra Chhagaleya A division of the Taittiriya school Referred to in works such as the Baudhayana Srauta Sutra Unknown Edit The Brahmanas listed below are often only mentioned by name in other texts without any further information such as what Veda they are attached to Brahmana DescriptionAruneya Referred to in the Tantra Varttika Saulabha Possibly a recension of the RigVeda Referred to in the Samkhyana Grihya Sutra Asvalayana Grihya Sutra and Kaushitaki Brahmana Sailali Referred to in the Apastamba Srauta Sutra Parasara Possibly a recension of the RigVeda Referred to in the Mahabhasya Mashasaravi Referred to in works such as the Ganapatha by PaṇiniKapeya Referred to in the Satyashada Srauta Sutra Rahasyamnaya Referred to in the Smriti Ratnakara Nirukta Referred to in the Taittiriya Upanishad see also the Nirukta Anvakhyana Referred to by Caland who published extracts in the fourth volume of Acta Orientalia in 1926 This is available in German 65 Bashkala Referred to in a list of manuscripts in the library of Kavindracharya Saravati MandukeyaTrikharvva Recensions mentioned by Sayana KaradvishaManuscripts and translations EditRigVeda Edit Brahmana Sanskrit Transliteration EnglishAitareya archive org version 1 version 2 TITUS e text archive org M Haug Kausitaki Samkhyana Gretil e text archive org A B Keith includes the Aitareya Brahmana YajurVeda Edit Brahmana Sanskrit Transliteration EnglishShatapatha Madhyandina archive org Part One Two and Three Gretil e text Part One Two Three Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine Ten Eleven Twelve N A Thirteen Fourteen Sacred Texts com e texts Vedavid org e text TITUS e text Archive org Part One Two Three Four and FiveShatapatha Kanva Taittiriya archive org version 1 version 2 TITUS e text SAKSHI Volume 1 Volume 2Taittiriya ChardiVadhula Anvakhyana archive orgAtharvaVeda Edit Brahmana Sanskrit Transliteration EnglishGopatha archive org version 1 Complete Works of Jibananda Vidyasagara version 2 Rajendralala Mitra and Harachandra Vidyabhushana Gretil e text TITUS e text Shodhganga C G Kashikar Lost Brahmanas fragments Edit Brahmanas EnglishAhvaraka Kaukati Kalabavi Caraka Chagaleya Jabali Jaiminya Pamgayanu Bhallavi Masasaravi Maitrayaniya Rauruki Satyayana Sailali Svetasvatara and Haridravika archive org B Ghosh See also EditHinduism Vedas Vedic literature Upanishad Samhita Aranyaka Agama Hinduism Shruti Vedanga Upaveda Purana Vedic Period Vedic SanskritReferences Edit a b c Winternitz M 1927 A History Of Indian Literature vol 1 pp 187 225 192 Klaus Klostermaier 2007 A Survey of Hinduism Third Edition State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791470824 page 47 Michael Witzel Tracing the Vedic dialects in Dialectes dans les litteratures Indo Aryennes ed Caillat Paris 1989 97 265 Biswas et al 1989 Cosmic Perspectives Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521343541 pages 42 43 Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit brahmana spokensanskrit org Retrieved 24 January 2020 Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary b brahmaṇa faculty washington edu Retrieved 24 January 2020 a b c d e Haug Martin 1922 The Aitareya Brahmanam of the Rigveda Robarts University of Toronto Bahadurganj Allahabad Sudhindra Nath Vasu pp ix x overview xi etymology xl lost Brahmanas Kausitaki and Samkhyana a b c d e f g Dr Narinder Sharma History Of Vedic Literature Brahmana And Aranyaka Works S Shr pp 6 9 21 22 Kausitaki and Samkhyana 39 40 Jaiminiya Brahmana 43 83 chapter 3 Lost Brahmanas Satapatha Brahmana Part III SBE41 Sixth Kanda VI 7 4 Fourth Brahmana www sacred texts com Retrieved 24 January 2020 Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit Vyakhyana spokensanskrit org Retrieved 24 January 2020 Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit Pravachana spokensanskrit org Retrieved 24 January 2020 Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit Vijnayate spokensanskrit org Retrieved 24 January 2020 a b c d e f g h i Dalal Roshen 15 April 2014 The Vedas An Introduction to Hinduism s Sacred Texts Penguin UK pp Chapter 2 ISBN 978 81 8475 763 7 a b Shri Satya 23 January 2017 Demystifying Brahminism and Re Inventing Hinduism Volume 1 Demystifying Brahminism Notion Press pp Brahmana Period ISBN 978 1 946515 54 4 a b c Satapatha Brahmana Part 1 SBE12 Introduction www sacred texts com Retrieved 24 January 2020 a b Arts Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts 1994 क ण वशतपथब र ह मणम Motilal Banarsidass Publ pp v vi xix xx ISBN 978 81 208 1127 0 Brahmana Encyclopaedia Britannica 2013 The pronunciation challenge arises from the change in meaning in some cases if something is pronounced incorrectly for example hrA hrada hradA hradya hrag hrAm and hrAsa each has different meanings see Harvey P Alper 2012 Understanding Mantras Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120807464 pages 104 105 a b c Klaus Klostermaier 1994 A Survey of Hinduism Second Edition State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791421093 pages 67 69 Max Muller A History of Ancient Sanskrit Literature at Google Books page 147 Gavin Flood Ed 2003 The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism Blackwell Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 4051 3251 5 pages 67 69 Satapatha Brahmana Part 1 SBE12 First Kanda I 1 4 Fourth Brahmana www sacred texts com Retrieved 28 January 2020 Lakshman Sarup 1967 The Nighantu And The Nirukta pp 282 archive org e reader numbering Appendix 1 a b Modak B R 1995 Sayana Sahitya Akademi pp 16 18 ISBN 978 81 7201 940 2 Bloomfield Maurice 1906 A Vedic Concordance 1906 pp xv xxii Keith Arthur Berriedale 1970 The Religion and Philosophy of the Veda and Upanishads Motilal Banarsidass Publishe ISBN 978 81 208 0645 0 a b Whitney William Dwight 1994 Sanskrit Grammar Including Both the Classical Language and the Older Dialects of Veda and Brahmaṇa Motilal Banarsidass Publishe pp Abbreviations ISBN 978 81 208 0621 4 Tull Herman Wayne 1 January 1989 The Vedic Origins of Karma Cosmos as Man in Ancient Indian Myth and Ritual SUNY Press p 123 ISBN 978 0 7914 0094 4 a b c d e f Majumdar Ramesh Chandra 1977 Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass Publ pp 36 39 ISBN 978 81 208 0436 4 Caland W 1931 Pancavimsa Brahmana Osmania University Digital Library Of India The Asiatic Society Of Bengal pp 1 A Macdonell 1912 Vedic Index Of Names And Subjects Vol I 1912 pp 305 Houben Jan E M 1991 The Pravargya Brahmaṇa of the Taittiriya Araṇyaka An Ancient Commentary on the Pravargya Ritual Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 978 81 208 0868 3 a b c d Keith Arthur Berriedale 1920 Rigveda Brahmanas The Aitareya And Kausitaki Brahmanas Of The Rigveda pp 22 28 37 38 Kausitaki 49 Kausitaki date 348 Kausitaki quote 1 2 Haug Martin 1922 The Aitareya Brahmanam of the Rigveda Robarts University of Toronto Bahadurganj Allahabad Sudhindra Nath Vasu pp 163 164 Deussen Paul 1980 Sechzig Upaniṣad s des Veda Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 7 ISBN 978 81 208 1468 4 Prabhupada A C Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 4 The Creation of the Fourth Order vedabase io Retrieved 25 January 2020 Kausitaki Shankhayana Brahmana Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts Ministry of Culture Government of India The Upanishads Part 1 SBE01 Introduction to the Upanishads IV The Kaushitaki Brahmana Upanishad www sacred texts com Retrieved 25 January 2020 a b c d e f g h i Caland W 1931 Pancavimsa Brahmana pp i iii Caland W 1931 Pancavimsa Brahmana pp 323 www wisdomlib org 4 January 2019 Saman Saman Shaman Saman 2 definitions www wisdomlib org Retrieved 27 January 2020 Bodewitz Hendrik 1973 Jaiminiya Brahmana Book 1 English pp 155 Bodewitz H W 1973 Jaiminiya Brahmaṇa I 1 65 Leiden E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 03604 8 OCLC 660020 Jaimini 1923 The Mimamsa sutra of Jaimini Translated by Mohan Lal Sandal Robarts University of Toronto Allahabad Panini Office nindi punj 1 Upanishads Vol 1 Chandogya Kena Aitreya Kausitaki Isa CHANDOGYOPANISHAD BRAHMANA Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts Ministry of Culture Government of India a b Witz Klaus G 1998 The Supreme Wisdom of the Upaniṣads An Introduction Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 217 ISBN 978 81 208 1573 5 Muller F Max ed 1879 Upanishads Vol 1 Chandogya Kena Aitreya Kausitaki Isa pp lxxxvii including footnote 2 Muller F Max ed 1879 Upanishads Vol 1 Chandogya Kena Aitreya Kausitaki Isa pp lxxxvii Satapatha Brahmana 1 Satapatha Brahmana Part 1 SBE12 First Kanda I 4 1 Fourth Adhyaya First brahmana www sacred texts com Retrieved 7 January 2020 Kak Subhash C 1993 Astronomy of the Satapatha Brahmana PDF Indian Journal of History of Science 28 1 15 Bibcode 1993InJHS 28 15K via Indian National Science Academy Taittiriya Brahmaṇa Text in Devanagari and Translation Sri Aurobindo Kapali Sastry Institute of Vedic Culture 2017 pp 107 Volume 1 ISBN 978 81 7994 166 9 Taittiriya Brahmana Vedic Heritage Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts Sanskrit Dictionary tittiri www sanskritdictionary com Retrieved 9 January 2020 The Vishnu Purana Book III Chapter V www sacred texts com Retrieved 25 January 2020 Wilson H H Horace Hayman 1862 Works by the late Horace Hayman Wilson Vol 8 The Vishnu Purana Books III and IV Princeton Theological Seminary Library London Trubner pp 54 footnote 1 Nair Shantha N 2008 Echoes of Ancient Indian Wisdom The Universal Hindu Vision and Its Edifice Pustak Mahal ISBN 978 81 223 1020 7 Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit Anubrahmana spokensanskrit org Retrieved 26 January 2020 Sanskrit Dictionary for Spoken Sanskrit Anvakhyana spokensanskrit org Retrieved 26 January 2020 Vadhula Anvakhyana Brahmana in Sanskrit pp 10 11 a b Maurice Bloomfield 1899 The Atharveda And The Gopatha Brahmana pp 11 13 Shakhas of the ArtharvaVeda 101 103 Kasjikar C G Gopatha brahmana english translation with notes and introduction Shodhganga hdl 10603 151631 Bahulkar S S 1990 Vedic texts a revision Prof C G Kashikar felicitation volume Motilal Banarsidass Publishe p 10 ISBN 978 81 208 0806 5 Konow Sten 1926 Acta Orientalia Volume IV pp 35 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brahmana amp oldid 1133758370, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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