The
s (
Devanagari: ) are part of the
Hindu śruti literature. They are commentaries on the four
Vedas, detailing the proper performance of rituals.
Each Vedic
shakha (school) had its own Brahmana, and it is not known how many of these texts existed during the
Mahajanapadas period.
A total of 19 Brahmanas are extant at least in their entirety: two associated with the
Rigveda, six with the
Yajurveda,
ten with the
Samaveda and one with the
Atharvaveda. Additionally, there are a handful of fragmentarily preserved texts. They vary greatly in length; the edition of the
Shatapatha Brahmana fills five volumes of the
Sacred Books of the East, while the
Vamsa Brahmana can be printed on a single page.
The Brahmanas were seminal in the development of later Indian thought and scholarship, including
Hindu philosophy, predecessors of
Vedanta, law, astronomy, geometry, linguistics (
Panini), the concept of
Karma, or the stages in life such as
brahmacarya,
grihastha and eventually,
sannyasi. Some Brahmanas contain sections that are
Aranyakas or
Upanishads in their own right.
The language of the Brahmanas is a separate stage of
Vedic Sanskrit, younger than the text of the samhitas (the
mantra text of the Vedas proper) but for the most part older than the text of the
Sutras. It dates to the
Iron Age, or about the 9th, 8th and 7th centuries BC, with some of the younger Brahmanas (such as the
Shatapatha Brahmana) overlapping with the Sutra period, dating to about the 6th century BC.
Historically, this corresponds to the emergence of great kingdoms or
Mahajanapadas out of the earlier tribal kingdoms during the later Vedic period.
List of Brahmanas
Each Brahmana is associated with one of the four Vedas, and within the tradition of that Veda with a particular
shakha or school:
Rigveda
Yajurveda
- *Maitrayani Samhita (MS) and an Aranyaka (= accented Maitr. Up.)
- *(Caraka)Katha Samhita (KS); the Katha school has an additional fragmentary Brahmana (KathB) and Aranyaka (KathA)
- *Kapisthalakatha Samhita (KpS), and a few fragments of its Brahmana
- *Taittiriya Samhita (TS). The Taittiriya school has an additional Taittiriya Brahmana (TB) and Aranyaka (TA) as well as the late Vedic Vadhula Anvakhyana (Br.)
- *Kanva: Shatapatha Brahmana, Kanva recension (SBK)
Samaveda
- Devatadhyaya or Daivata Brahmana
- Mantra or Chandogya Brahmana (MB)
- Vamsa Brahmana. The text consists of one short chapter, detailing successions of teachers and disciples.
- Jaiminiya Arseya Brahmana
Atharvaveda