The classical dances of India are among the most tested Art & Culture topics in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, State PSC, and Banking General Awareness exams.
India officially recognises 8 classical dance forms under the Sangeet Natak Akademi (SNA) — each rooted in ancient texts, regional traditions, and elaborate performance systems. From the Natya Shastra-based Bharatanatyam to the mystic Manipuri and the visually spectacular Kathakali, this page gives you a complete list of all 8 classical dances with their state, origin, key features, governing texts, and exam-critical facts.
⚡ Quick Facts
- India officially recognises 8 classical dance forms — all under the Sangeet Natak Akademi (SNA), established in 1953.
- Bharatanatyam (Tamil Nadu) is the oldest and most widely performed classical dance form in India.
- Odissi (Odisha) is considered the oldest surviving classical dance based on archaeological evidence — cave sculptures at Udayagiri-Khandagiri date to the 2nd century BCE.
- Kathakali (Kerala) is known for its elaborate face makeup (chutti), costumes, and mudras narrating Hindu epics.
- Manipuri is unique — it does NOT include aggressive facial expressions or heavy stamping; it is lyrical, soft, and devotional.
- Sattriya (Assam) is the youngest classical dance — recognised by SNA in 2000.
Kerala has TWO classical dances: Kathakali (ensemble, dramatic, traditionally male) AND Mohiniyattam (solo, feminine, exclusively female). Kathak is the ONLY North Indian classical dance — all others are from South or Northeast India. Sattriya is the ONLY classical dance from Northeast India — Bihu is Assam’s folk dance, not classical. Chhau, Yakshagana, and Bhangra are NOT classical — they are folk/semi-classical. Kuchipudi is from Andhra Pradesh — not Telangana (though it is now associated with both states).
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💃 Classical Dances of India — All 8 Forms
| # ↕ | Classical Dance ↕ | State ↕ | Ancient Text / Basis | Deity / Theme | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bharatanatyam | Tamil Nadu | Natya Shastra (Bharata Muni); Abhinaya Darpana; Devadasi tradition | Lord Shiva (Nataraja); devotional | Oldest and most widely performed classical dance; revived by Rukmini Devi Arundale; solo female; angular/geometric postures |
| 2 | Kathak | Uttar Pradesh (North India) | Natya Shastra; evolved from Kathakar (storytelling priests) tradition | Lord Krishna; Radha-Krishna devotion; Mughal-influenced abstract movements | ONLY North Indian classical dance; two gharanas: Lucknow (Birju Maharaj) + Jaipur; fast spins (chakkar); heavy footwork (tatkar) |
| 3 | Kathakali | Kerala | Natya Shastra; Hastha Lakshanadipika; evolved from Krishnanattam | Lord Vishnu; Mahabharata, Ramayana | Most visually spectacular; elaborate face makeup (chutti) takes hours; traditionally male performers; Kerala’s first of two classical dances |
| 4 | Kuchipudi | Andhra Pradesh | Natya Shastra; associated with village Kuchipudi (AP); Siddhendra Yogi (17th century) | Lord Krishna; Bhama Kalapam narrative; Vaishnavite | Performers traditionally from Brahmin community; unique: dancers also sing and speak during performance; Carnatic music |
| 5 | Odissi | Odisha | Natya Shastra; Abhinaya Chandrika; Shilpa Shastra; Mahari temple tradition | Lord Jagannath (Vishnu); Gita Govinda (Jayadeva) | Oldest based on archaeological evidence (Udayagiri-Khandagiri caves, 2nd BCE); unique Tribhanga posture (three-bend S-curve) |
| 6 | Manipuri | Manipur | Natya Shastra; Meitei cultural tradition; Lai Haraoba festival | Lord Krishna; Raas Leela dances | Unique: no heavy stamping, no aggressive facial expressions, no dramatic gestures; soft and lyrical; distinctive Potloi (barrel skirt) costume; Tagore introduced it to wider India |
| 7 | Mohiniyattam | Kerala | Natya Shastra; Hastha Lakshanadipika; Balarama Bharatam | Mohini (female avatar of Vishnu); “dance of the enchantress” | Performed exclusively by women; white and golden costume; Vallathol Narayana Menon revived it; Swati Tirunal composed music; Kerala’s second classical dance |
| 8 | Sattriya | Assam | Natya Shastra; Ankia Nat plays by Srimanta Sankardeva (15th–16th century) | Lord Krishna, Vishnu; Vaishnavite devotion | Youngest classical dance — recognised by SNA in 2000; performed in Vaishnavite Sattras (monasteries); only classical dance from Northeast India |
🎭 Distinctive Features — At a Glance
| Dance | Solo / Ensemble | Gender | Unique Identifier | Music Style |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bharatanatyam | Solo | Female (traditionally) | Angular, geometric postures; fixed stances; Carnatic music | Carnatic |
| Kathak | Solo | Both | Fast spins (chakkar); heavy footwork (tatkar); Mughal-influenced costume; two gharanas | Hindustani |
| Kathakali | Ensemble | Male (traditionally) | Elaborate face makeup (chutti) — takes hours; costume 20–30 kg; 9 character types | Sopana |
| Kuchipudi | Solo + Group | Both | Performers sing AND speak during dance; brass plate dance; Brahmin tradition | Carnatic |
| Odissi | Solo | Female (traditionally) | Tribhanga posture (S-curve: three bends at neck, torso, knee); sculptural quality | Hindustani + Carnatic blend |
| Manipuri | Ensemble | Both | No stamping, no aggressive expressions; soft circular movements; Potloi (barrel skirt) costume | Manipuri classical |
| Mohiniyattam | Solo | Female only | White-and-gold costume; gentle flowing (Lasya style); “dance of the enchantress” | Carnatic (Sopana style) |
| Sattriya | Solo + Group | Originally male monks | Performed in Vaishnavite Sattras (monasteries); monk-dancers; youngest recognition (2000) | Borgeet (Vaishnavite songs) |
🌟 Famous Exponents of Classical Dances
| Dance Form | Key Reviver / Pioneer | Famous Exponents |
|---|---|---|
| Bharatanatyam | Rukmini Devi Arundale — revived from Devadasi tradition | T. Balasaraswati; Yamini Krishnamurthy; Padma Subrahmanyam |
| Kathak | Evolved via Kathakar priests; Mughal court patronage | Birju Maharaj (Lucknow Gharana); Lachhu Maharaj; Sitara Devi; Shovana Narayan |
| Kathakali | Evolved from Krishnanattam; codified in Kerala | Kalamandalam Gopi; Kalamandalam Ramankutty Nair |
| Kuchipudi | Siddhendra Yogi (17th century) — systematised it | Vempati Chinna Satyam; Raja Radha Reddy; Yamini Reddy |
| Odissi | Kelucharan Mahapatra — father of modern Odissi | Sanjukta Panigrahi; Sonal Mansingh; Madhavi Mudgal |
| Manipuri | Rabindranath Tagore — introduced to wider India; Guru Bipin Sinha revived it | Guru Bipin Sinha; Darshana Jhaveri |
| Mohiniyattam | Vallathol Narayana Menon — revived; Swati Tirunal composed music | Kalyanikutty Amma; Hema Malini; Shanta Dhananjayan |
| Sattriya | Srimanta Sankardeva — created it (15th–16th century) | Jatin Goswami; Anita Sharma |
📖 The Natya Shastra — Foundation of All Classical Dances
- Author: Sage Bharata Muni (estimated 2nd century BCE – 2nd century CE)
- Status: Called the “Fifth Veda” for its comprehensive scope
- All 8 classical dances derive their theoretical framework from the Natya Shastra
| Concept | Sanskrit Term | Meaning | Exam Angle |
|---|---|---|---|
| Three components of dance | Nritta / Nritya / Natya | Pure rhythm / Expressive dance / Dramatic theatre | All 3 must be known; frequently asked in sequence |
| Nine emotions (rasas) | Navarasas | Shringara (love), Hasya (comedy), Karuna (sorrow), Raudra (fury), Vira (heroism), Bhayanaka (terror), Bibhatsa (disgust), Adbhuta (wonder), Shanta (peace) | Total = 9; Shanta (peace) added last |
| Four types of expression | Abhinaya | Angika (body gestures), Vachika (speech), Aharya (costume/makeup), Sattvika (internal/emotional) | 4 types; Angika = most visible |
| Hand gestures | Mudras / Hastas | Codified hand and finger positions for communication | 24 Asamyuta (single-hand) + 13 Samyuta (double-hand) hastas |
⚖️ Compare Two Classical Dance Forms
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
The Natya Shastra, attributed to sage Bharata Muni (2nd century BCE–2nd century CE), is the foundational text of all Indian performing arts. It covers:
- Three dance components: Nritta (pure rhythm) + Nritya (expressive) + Natya (dramatic theatre)
- Nine Rasas (Navarasas): Shringara (love), Hasya (comedy), Karuna (sorrow), Raudra (fury), Vira (heroism), Bhayanaka (terror), Bibhatsa (disgust), Adbhuta (wonder), Shanta (peace)
- Four Abhinaya (expression) types: Angika (body), Vachika (speech), Aharya (costume), Sattvika (internal)
- All 8 classical dances are theoretically rooted in the Natya Shastra
- Kerala has TWO classical dances: Kathakali (ensemble, dramatic, traditionally male) + Mohiniyattam (solo, feminine, exclusively female)
- Kathak is the ONLY North Indian classical dance — all others are South or Northeast Indian
- Sattriya is the ONLY classical dance from Northeast India — Manipuri is from Manipur (Northeast), but Sattriya is from Assam
- Bihu (Assam) and Chhau are NOT classical dances — they are folk/semi-classical
- Kuchipudi originated in village Kuchipudi, Andhra Pradesh
- Bharatanatyam: Angular, geometric postures; fixed stances; Carnatic music; Tamil Nadu
- Kathak: Fast spins (chakkar); heavy footwork (tatkar); Mughal influence; two gharanas (Lucknow + Jaipur)
- Kathakali: Elaborate face makeup (chutti — hours of preparation); ensemble; traditionally male; Kerala
- Kuchipudi: Performers also sing and speak; brass plate dance; Brahmin community origin; AP
- Odissi: Tribhanga posture (S-curve); sculptural quality; oldest archaeological evidence (2nd BCE)
- Manipuri: No stamping, no aggressive expressions; soft circular; Potloi barrel skirt; Manipur
- Mohiniyattam: Exclusively female; white-and-gold; “dance of the enchantress”; Kerala
- Sattriya: Monastery-based; Vaishnavite; youngest recognition (2000); Assam
- Rukmini Devi Arundale — revived Bharatanatyam from the Devadasi tradition; founded Kalakshetra
- Birju Maharaj — greatest Kathak dancer; Lucknow Gharana; Padma Vibhushan awardee (1986)
- Kelucharan Mahapatra — father of modern Odissi; revived it post-independence
- Vallathol Narayana Menon — revived Mohiniyattam; founded Kerala Kalamandalam
- Srimanta Sankardeva — 15th–16th century Vaishnavite saint; created Sattriya in Assam’s Sattras
- Rabindranath Tagore — introduced Manipuri dance to Bengal and wider India
- Siddhendra Yogi (17th century) — systematised Kuchipudi; established its tradition
- Established: 1953 under Ministry of Culture; HQ New Delhi
- Recognises: 8 classical dance forms, classical music, and theatre
- Sattriya (Assam) was added as the 8th classical dance in 2000 — the most recently recognised
- SNA Awards — the highest recognition for performing arts in India
- Akademi Fellowship (Ratna Sadsya) — highest honour given by SNA
- NOT classical (folk/semi-classical): Chhau, Yakshagana, Bhangra, Bihu, Garba, Giddha
All 8 classical dances: “BK³ O M² S”
B = Bharatanatyam (TN) | K = Kathak (UP) | K = Kathakali (Kerala) | K = Kuchipudi (AP) | O = Odissi (Odisha) | M = Manipuri (Manipur) | M = Mohiniyattam (Kerala) | S = Sattriya (Assam)
Kerala has two: “Kerala has Kat & Mohi”
Kathakali (dramatic, male, ensemble) + Mohiniyattam (feminine, female, solo)
Three dance components: “NNN” — Nritta + Nritya + Natya
Pure rhythm → Expressive → Dramatic theatre
Youngest and oldest: “Sattriya 2000 | Odissi 2nd BCE”
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The Sangeet Natak Akademi (SNA) officially recognises 8 classical dance forms: Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kathakali, Kuchipudi, Odissi, Manipuri, Mohiniyattam, and Sattriya. Sattriya from Assam was the last to be added, in 2000. Forms like Chhau, Yakshagana, and Bhangra are folk or semi-classical, not classical. The SNA was established in 1953 under the Ministry of Culture.
Sattriya, originating from the Vaishnavite Sattras (monasteries) of Assam and developed by the 15th–16th century saint Srimanta Sankardeva, was recognised as India’s 8th classical dance by the Sangeet Natak Akademi in 2000. It is the only classical dance from Northeast India. Manipuri is from Manipur (not Assam), and Bihu is Assam’s folk dance — not a classical dance.
Odissi is uniquely identified by the Tribhanga posture — a three-bend stance where the body forms an S-curve with bends at the neck, torso, and knee. This posture is depicted in temple sculptures at the Konark Sun Temple and Udayagiri-Khandagiri caves. It gives Odissi its characteristic lyrical and sculptural quality. Odissi is also considered the oldest surviving classical dance based on these 2nd century BCE archaeological depictions.
Kerala is the only Indian state associated with two classical dance forms. Kathakali is a dramatic ensemble form traditionally performed by men, featuring extraordinarily elaborate face makeup (chutti) based on Mahabharata and Ramayana stories. Mohiniyattam is performed exclusively by women, with soft lyrical movements and a white-and-golden costume — representing Mohini, the female avatar of Vishnu.
Pandit Birju Maharaj (1938–2022) was one of India’s greatest classical dancers — a maestro of Kathak from the Lucknow Gharana. He received the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award and the Padma Vibhushan. The Lucknow Gharana emphasises grace, expressiveness (Bhava), and lyrical elegance, in contrast to the Jaipur Gharana’s focus on powerful footwork and rhythmic precision. Rukmini Devi Arundale is associated with Bharatanatyam (Kalakshetra), and Kelucharan Mahapatra with Odissi.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
India officially recognises 8 classical dance forms, as designated by the Sangeet Natak Akademi (SNA) — India’s national academy for performing arts, established in 1953 under the Ministry of Culture. The eight are: Bharatanatyam (Tamil Nadu), Kathak (Uttar Pradesh/North India), Kathakali (Kerala), Kuchipudi (Andhra Pradesh), Odissi (Odisha), Manipuri (Manipur), Mohiniyattam (Kerala), and Sattriya (Assam). Sattriya, developed in Assam’s Vaishnavite monasteries by saint Srimanta Sankardeva, was the most recently added — recognised in 2000. Forms such as Chhau, Yakshagana, and Bhangra are folk or semi-classical, not classical.
The Natya Shastra, attributed to sage Bharata Muni and estimated to have been composed between the 2nd century BCE and 2nd century CE, is the foundational treatise on Indian performing arts — often called the “Fifth Veda.” It defines the three components of dance: Nritta (pure rhythmic movement), Nritya (expressive dance), and Natya (dramatic performance). It enumerates the Navarasas (nine emotions) and the four types of Abhinaya (expression). All 8 Indian classical dance forms derive their theoretical framework from the Natya Shastra.
Five of the eight classical dances originate from South India. Bharatanatyam (Tamil Nadu) is the most widely performed, with precise geometric positions and Carnatic music. Kathakali (Kerala) features hours of elaborate face painting and ensemble storytelling through gesture. Kuchipudi (Andhra Pradesh) is unique — performers also sing and speak during the dance. Odissi (Odisha, East India) is identified by its Tribhanga (three-bend) posture. Mohiniyattam (Kerala) is exclusively female with gentle flowing Lasya-style movements. Kerala is the only state with two classical dance forms — Kathakali and Mohiniyattam.
Classical dances are tested in UPSC Prelims (Indian Art & Culture — GS1), SSC CGL, Banking GA, and all State PSC exams. Key tested facts: total count (8), governing body (Sangeet Natak Akademi), state associated with each dance, which state has two (Kerala), the youngest by recognition (Sattriya, 2000), the dance with oldest archaeological evidence (Odissi), Kathak as the only North Indian classical dance, Manipuri’s unique non-aggressive nature, the two Kathak gharanas (Lucknow — Birju Maharaj; Jaipur), famous exponents (Rukmini Devi Arundale — Bharatanatyam; Kelucharan Mahapatra — Odissi), and the Natya Shastra’s three dance components and nine rasas.