The Dharmasutras: The Law Codes of Ancient IndiaPatrick Olivelle The Dharmasutras are the four surviving works of the ancient Indian expert tradition on the subject of dharma, or the rules of behaviour a community recognizes as binding on its members. Written in a pithy and aphoristic style and representing the culmination of a long tradition of scholarship, the Dharmasutras record intense disputes and divergent views on such subjects as the education of the young and their rites of passage, ritual procedures and religious ceremonies, marriage and marital rights and obligations, dietary restrictions, the right professions for and the proper interaction between different social groups, sins and their expiations, institutions for the pursuit of holiness, king and the administration of justice, crimes and punishments, death and ancestral rites. In short, these unique documents give us a glimpse of how people, especially Brahmin males, were ideally expected to live their lives within an ordered and hierarchically arranged society. In this first English translation of the Dharmasutras for over a century, Patrick Olivelle uses the same lucid and elegant style as in his award-winning translation of the Upanisads and incorporates the most recent scholarship on ancient Indian law, society, and religion. Complex material is helpfully organized, making this the ideal edition for the non-specialist as well as for students of Indian society and religion. |
Other editions - View all
The Dharmasutras : The Law Codes of Ancient India: The Law Codes of Ancient ... Patrick Olivelle No preview available - 1999 |
Common terms and phrases
according almsfood ancestors ancestral offering animals Āpastamba arduous penance bath bath-graduate Baudhāyana becomes belonging Brāhmaņa Brahmin Bṛhaspati Bühler common era control his breath Darbha grass death dharma Dharmasūtra drink eaten father forbidden garment Gautama ghee gifts give given gods Govinda grass guest hand Haradatta Homage husband hymn Indra killing king Kṣatriya leftovers live loss of caste marriage meaning milk milk-rice moon night oblation offspring OM I quench outcaste perform period of impurity person Prajāpati priest private vedic recitation purified quench quote recitation is suspended recite the Veda refers rites Rudra rules sacred fire Sāman Samaveda Sanskrit Savitr Sāvitrī saying seated seers semen sexual intercourse sins causing loss sip water Smrti Soma Soma sacrifice someone sprinkle student Śūdra Śūdra woman sūtra Svāhā teacher term three days urine Vaiśya Vasistha Veda vedic scholar vedic text verses wash wear wife women


