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YAJURVEDA


The '''Yajurveda''' (Sanskrit '', a tatpurusha compound of '' "sacrifice" + '' "knowledge") is one of the four Hindu Vedas. The Yajurveda Samhita contains the liturgy needed to perform the rituals and sacrifices of the religion of the Vedic period, and the added Brahmana and Shrautasutra commentaries add information on the details of their performance .

Contents
Recensions
Shukla Yajurveda
Krishna Yajurveda
Legend
Large numbers
References
Literature
See also
External links

Recensions


There are two primary versions or ''samhitas'' of the Yajurveda: Shukla (white) and Krishna (black). Both contain the verses necessary for rituals, but the Krishna Yajurveda includes the Brahmana prose commentary within the ''samhita'', while the Shukla Yajurveda considers the Brahmanas separate texts.
Shukla Yajurveda

There are two (nearly identical) ''shakhas'' or recensions of the Shukla (White) Yajurveda, both known as Vajasaneyi-Samhita (VS):

★ ''Vajasaneyi Madhyandiniya'' (VSM)

★ ''Vajasaneyi Kanva'' of Kosala (VSK)
The former is popular in North India, Gujarat, parts of Maharashtra (north of Nashik) and northern parts of Orissa, and thus commands a numerous following. The Kanva Shakha is popular in Maharashtra (south of Nashik), most of Orissa, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. Sureshvaracharya, one of the four main disciples of Jagadguru Adi Shankara, is said to have followed the Kanva ''shakha''. The Guru himself followed the Taittiriya Shakha with the Apastamba Kalpasutra. The Vedic rituals of the Ranganathaswamy Temple at Srirangam, the second biggest temple in India, are performed according to the Kanva ''shakha''. The White Yajurveda has two Upanishads associated with it: the Isa Vasya and the Brihadaranyaka upanishads. The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad is the most voluminous of all Upanishads.
The VS has forty chapters or ''adhyayas'', containing the formulas used with the following rituals:
:1.-2.: New and Full Moon sacrifices
:3.: Agnihotra
:4.-8.: Somayajna
:9.-10.: Vajapeya and Rajasuya, two modifications of the Soma sacrifice
:11.-18.: construction of altars and hearths, especially the Agnicayana
:19.-21.: Sautramani, a ritual originally counteracting the effects of excessive Soma-drinking
:22.-25.: Ashvamedha
:26.-29.: supplementary formulas for various rituals
:30.-31.: Purushamedha
:32.-34.: Sarvamedha
:35.: Pitriyajna
:36.-39.: Pravargya
:40.: the final adhyaya is the famous Isha Upanishad
The VSM was edited and published by Weber (London and Berlin, 1852), and translated into English by Ralph Griffith (Benares, 1899).
Krishna Yajurveda

There are four recensions of the Krishna ("black" or "dark") Yajurveda:

★ '' (TS) of Panchala

★ '' (MS)

★ '' (KS) of Madra

★ '' (KapS) of Bahika
Each of the recensions has a ''Brahmana'' associated with it, and some of them also have associated Shrautasutras, Grhyasutras, Aranyakas, Upanishads and Pratishakhyas.
'The Taittiriya Shakha:'
The best known of these recensions is the TS, named after Tittiri, a pupil of Yaska. It consists of 7 books or ''kandas'', subdivided in chapters or ''prapathakas'', further subdivided into individual hymns. Some individual hymns in this Samhita have gained particular importance in Hinduism; e.g. TS 4.5 and TS 4.7 constitute the Shri Rudram Chamakam, while 1.8.6.i is the Shaivaite Tryambakam mantra. The formula '' prefixed to the (rigvedic) Gayatri mantra is also from the Yajurveda, appearing four times. The Taittiriya recension of the Black Yajurveda ''shakha'' most prevalent in southern India. Among the followers of this Shakha, the Apastamba Sutras is the common Shrautasutra associated with the Shakha. The Taittiriya Shakha consists of Taittiriya Samhita (having seven kaandas), Taittiriya Braahmana (having three kaandas), Taittiriya Aaranyaka (having seven prashnas) (See Aranyaka Literature), Taittiriya Upanishad (having three ''prashnas'' or ''vallis'' - Sheeksha valli, Ananda valli and Bhrigu valli) and the Mahaanaarayana Upanishad. The Taittiriya Upanishad and Mahaanaarayana Upanishad are considered to be the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth prashnas of the Aaranyaka. The words ''prapaathaka'' and ''kaanda'' (meaning sections) are interchangeably used in the Vedic literature. ''Prashna'' and ''valli'' refer to sections of the Aaranyaka.
Three recensions have been edited and published: the Taittiriya by Weber in "Indische Studien", XI, XII (Berlin, 1871-72), the Maitrayani by von Schroeder (Leipzig, 1881-86) and the Kathaka by von Schroeder (Leipzig, 1900-09). Translations of the Taittiriya into English are due to A.B. Keith (Oxford 1913) and Devi Chand.

Legend


According to the Bhagavad Gita, the vedic seer Yajnavalkya studied the Yajurveda collection under the tutelage of sage Vaishampayana maternal uncle of Yajnavalkya. Yajnavalkya's birth was with a purpose as purported by Gods. He was an ''Ekasandhigrāhi'', meaning he learnt anything with just once teaching. The two came to have serious differences in interpretation. On one occasion, Vaishampayana was so enraged that he demanded the return of all the knowledge he has imparted to Yajnavalkya. Yagnavalkya vomited all the knowledge he had learnt. The other disciples of Vaishampayana, eager to receive this knowledge, assumed the form of ''tittiriya'' birds and ate that. Thus, that knowledge came to be called the Taittiriya Samhita (vrddhi derivation of ''tittiriya''). After having regurgitated out the knowledge acquired from his teacher, Yajnavalkya worshipped Surya (the Sun God) and acquired new knowledge directly from Narayana who preached Shukla Yajurveda by taking the shape of a stallion (''vāji rūpa'').

Large numbers


The Yajurveda documents the earliest known use of numbers up to a trillion (''parardha''). It also discusses the concept of numeric infinity (''purna'' "fullness"), stating that if you subtract ''purna'' from ''purna'', you are still left with ''purna''.[1]

References


1. [1]

Literature



Ralph Thomas Hotchkin Griffith, ''The Texts of the White Yajurveda. Translated with a Popular Commentary'' (1899).

★ Devi Chand, ''The Yajurveda. Sanskrit text with English translation. Third thoroughly revised and enlarged edition'' (1980).

★ ''The Sanhitâ of the Black Yajur Veda with the Commentary of Mâdhava ‘Achârya'', Calcutta (Bibl. Indica, 10 volumes, 1854-1899)

★ Kumar, Pushpendra, ''Taittiriya Brahmanam (Krsnam Yajurveda)'', 3 vols., Delhi (1998).

See also



Yajna

Kalpa (Vedanga)

Shatapatha Brahmana

Mahīdhara

External links



Sanskrit Web Freely downloadable, carefully edited Sanskrit texts of Taittiriya-Samhita, Taittiriya-Brahmana, Taittiriya-Aranyaka, Ekagni-Kanda etc. as well as English translations of the Taittiriya-Samhita etc.

Ralph Griffith, ''The Texts of the White Yajurveda'' 1899, full text, (online at sacred-texts.com)

A. Berridale Keith, ''The Yajur Veda - Taittiriya Sanhita'' 1914, full text, (online at sacred-texts.com)

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