(Redirected from Mukhya)The
Muktika canon of 108
Upanishads is headed by 10 'Mukhya' Upanishads. These are the ten oldest Upanishads, known to and commented upon by the
9th century scholar
Shankara.
Sanskrit '' means "principal", "chief", or "eminent". Also known as 'Dashopanishad's, these ten Mukhya Upanishads probably all predate the
Common Era, and they are accepted as
śruti by all Hindus. They are listed with their associated Veda ():
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, (ŚYV) "The Inner Ruler"
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(SV) "Who moves the world?"
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(KYV) "Death as Teacher"
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, (AV) "The Breath of Life"
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(AV) "Two modes of Knowing"
# (AV) "Consciousness and its phases"
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(KYV) "From Food to Joy"
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, (ṚV) "The Microcosm of Man"
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(SV) "Song and Sacrifice"
# (ŚYV)
Linguistically, the oldest of these (Bṛhadāraṇyaka, Chāndogya) belong to the "Brahmana" period of
Vedic Sanskrit, predating
Panini. A middle layer (Kaṭha) belongs to the "Sutra" period of late Vedic Sanskrit, roughly contemporary with Panini, and the youngest are in early
Classical Sanskrit, approximately contemporary with the
Bhagavad Gita (roughly dating to the period from the
4th century BC to the beginning of the
Common Era, or the
Mauryan period).
See also
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Samanya Vedanta Upanishads