India’s ancient textual heritage is among the world’s richest — spanning the Vedas (the oldest religious texts known), the philosophical Upanishads, the epics Ramayana and Mahabharata, the encyclopedic Puranas, and secular works of grammar, mathematics, and statecraft.

Questions on the names, authors, periods, languages, and key content of ancient Indian texts appear regularly in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, Railways, and State PSC exams under History, Art and Culture, and General Knowledge. This page gives you a complete, category-wise list of all important ancient Indian texts with period, language, key content, and exam-ready facts for 2026.

4 Vedas
108 Upanishads (principal)
18 Mahapuranas
~100,000 Shlokas in Mahabharata

⚡ Quick Facts

Must-Know Facts for Exams
  • Rigveda — Oldest known text in any Indo-European language (~1500–1200 BCE); contains 1,028 hymns; Gayatri Mantra is in Rigveda (3.62.10).
  • Mahabharata — World’s longest epic poem (~100,000 shlokas); attributed to sage Vyasa; contains the Bhagavad Gita within Bhishma Parva.
  • Arthashastra — Written by Kautilya (Chanakya); one of the world’s oldest treatises on statecraft; rediscovered by R. Shamasastry in 1905.
  • Aryabhatiya (499 CE) — Aryabhata correctly stated Earth rotates on its axis and calculated Pi to 4 decimal places (3.1416).
  • Kalidasa — Author of Abhijnanasakuntalam and Meghaduta; called the “Shakespeare of India”; greatest Sanskrit poet and playwright.
⚠️ Common Exam Trap

“Satyameva Jayate” (India’s national motto) is from the Mundaka Upanishad (3.1.6) — NOT from the Rigveda or Bhagavad Gita. Also: the Bhagavad Gita is NOT a standalone text — it is part of the Mahabharata (Bhishma Parva, chapters 23–40). And: Kalidasa’s greatest play is Abhijnanasakuntalam — not Meghaduta (which is a lyric poem) or Raghuvamsha (which is an epic poem).

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📚 Complete Ancient Indian Texts — Searchable List

🔍
# ↕ Text ↕ Author / Source Period (BCE/CE) ↕ Category Language Key Exam Fact
1RigvedaAnonymous (sruti)~1500–1200 BCE VedaVedic Sanskrit Oldest known Indo-European text; 1,028 hymns; Gayatri Mantra (3.62.10)
2SamavedaAnonymous (sruti)~1200–1000 BCE VedaVedic Sanskrit “Veda of Melodies”; basis of Indian classical music theory; shortest Veda
3YajurvedaAnonymous (sruti)~1200–900 BCE VedaVedic Sanskrit “Veda of Sacrifice”; Krishna (black) and Shukla (white) versions
4AtharvavedaAnonymous (sruti)~1000–900 BCE VedaVedic Sanskrit Youngest Veda; contains folk traditions, herbal medicine, spells
5Shatapatha BrahmanaAnonymous~900–700 BCE VedaVedic Sanskrit Largest Brahmana; explains Shukla Yajurveda rituals; early cosmology
6Brihadaranyaka UpanishadYajnavalkya (compiler)~700–500 BCE UpanishadVedic Sanskrit Oldest and most important Upanishad; Yajnavalkya’s dialogues; “Great Forest Text”
7Chandogya UpanishadAnonymous~700–500 BCE UpanishadVedic Sanskrit “Tat tvam asi” (That thou art) — famous mahavakya; part of Samaveda
8Katha UpanishadAnonymous~500–300 BCE UpanishadSanskrit Story of Nachiketa and Yama (Death); inquiry into death and the Self
9Mundaka UpanishadAnonymous~400–200 BCE UpanishadSanskrit India’s motto “Satyameva Jayate” from verse 3.1.6; attached to Atharvaveda
10Mandukya UpanishadAnonymous~300 BCE–100 CE UpanishadSanskrit Shortest Upanishad (12 verses); analysis of Om (AUM) and four states of consciousness
11RamayanaValmiki (Adi Kavi)~500–200 BCE EpicSanskrit First mahakavya (epic poem); Valmiki = “Adi Kavi” (first poet); 24,000 shlokas; 7 Kandas
12MahabharataVyasa (Krishna Dvaipayana)~400 BCE–400 CE EpicSanskrit World’s longest epic (~100,000 shlokas); contains Bhagavad Gita; 18 Parvas
13Bhagavad GitaVyasa (Mahabharata, Bhishma Parva)~200 BCE–200 CE PhilosophySanskrit 18 chapters; 700 verses; Karma Yoga, Jnana Yoga, Bhakti Yoga; within Mahabharata
14Brahmasutras (Vedanta Sutras)Badarayana (Vyasa)~200 BCE–200 CE PhilosophySanskrit Foundation of Vedanta philosophy; Shankaracharya wrote major commentary
15Yoga SutrasPatanjali~400 BCE–200 CE PhilosophySanskrit Foundation of classical Yoga; 8-limbed (Ashtanga) path; Patanjali also wrote Mahabhashya (grammar)
16Vaisheshika SutrasKanada~200 BCE PhilosophySanskrit Oldest atomic theory; Kanada proposed atoms (paramanu) as building blocks of universe
17ManusmritiAttributed to Manu~200 BCE–200 CE DharmashastraSanskrit Most famous Dharmashastra; laws of Manu; Ambedkar burned copies publicly (1927)
18ArthashastraKautilya (Chanakya / Vishnugupta)~300–100 BCE PolitySanskrit Oldest political economy treatise; rediscovered by R. Shamasastry (1905); Saptanga theory
19Bhagavata PuranaVyasa (attributed)~800–1000 CE PuranaSanskrit Most popular Purana; 12 Books; Krishna’s life; basis of Bhakti movement
20NatyashastraBharata Muni~200 BCE–200 CE ArtsSanskrit Foundation of Indian classical dance and theatre; 8 Rasas + Shanta (9th by Abhinavagupta)
21AshtadhyayiPanini~400 BCE GrammarSanskrit Sanskrit grammar in 3,959 sutras; most sophisticated ancient grammar known globally
22Charaka SamhitaCharaka (revised by Dridhabala)~300 BCE–200 CE ScienceSanskrit Foundation of Ayurveda; internal medicine; Tridosha theory; Charaka = physician
23Sushruta SamhitaSushruta~600 BCE–200 CE ScienceSanskrit “Father of Surgery”; first to describe rhinoplasty; 300+ procedures, 120 instruments; Varanasi
24AryabhatiyaAryabhata499 CE ScienceSanskrit Pi = 3.1416 (4 decimal places); Earth rotates on axis; calculation of eclipses
25BrahmasphutasiddhantaBrahmagupta628 CE ScienceSanskrit First text to define zero as a number; arithmetic with zero and negative numbers
26AbhijnanasakuntalamKalidasa~4th–5th century CE LiteratureSanskrit Kalidasa’s greatest play; “Shakespeare of India”; translated by William Jones (1789)
27MeghadutaKalidasa~4th–5th century CE LiteratureSanskrit Cloud messenger poem; yearning yaksha; most lyrical Sanskrit poem; describes Indian geography
28PanchatantraVishnu Sharma~200 BCE–200 CE LiteratureSanskrit Oldest surviving collection of prose fables; translated into 50+ languages; governance wisdom
29ThirukkuralThiruvalluvar~300 BCE–200 CE LiteratureTamil “Bible of Tamil people”; 1,330 couplets on dharma, wealth, love; translated into 40+ languages
30SilappadikaramIlango Adigal~200 CE LiteratureTamil Oldest surviving Tamil epic; Kovalan and Kannagi; written by a Jain monk-prince
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📿 Part A — The Vedas and Vedic Literature

#TextCategoryPeriodLanguageKey ContentKey Exam Fact
1RigvedaVeda (Samhita)~1500–1200 BCEVedic Sanskrit1,028 hymns (suktas) to gods; Agni, Indra, Varuna, Surya; 10,600 versesOldest known Indo-European text; Gayatri Mantra in Rigveda (3.62.10)
2SamavedaVeda (Samhita)~1200–1000 BCEVedic SanskritMelodies and chants (most derived from Rigveda); music of Vedic ritual“Veda of Melodies”; basis of Indian classical music theory; shortest Veda
3YajurvedaVeda (Samhita)~1200–900 BCEVedic SanskritProse formulae for rituals; mantras for sacrifice; Krishna (black) and Shukla (white) versions“Veda of Sacrifice”; most used in rituals; two distinct versions
4AtharvavedaVeda (Samhita)~1000–900 BCEVedic SanskritSpells, charms, magical formulae, medicinal healing; also philosophical hymnsYoungest Veda; contains folk traditions and herbal medicine; distinct from first 3 “trayi”
5Aitareya BrahmanaBrahmana~850–750 BCEVedic SanskritExplanation of Rigvedic rituals; procedures for Soma sacrificePart of Rigveda’s prose explanatory texts
6Shatapatha BrahmanaBrahmana~900–700 BCEVedic SanskritLargest Brahmana; explains Yajurveda rituals; contains early cosmologyPart of Shukla Yajurveda; largest Brahmana text
7AranyakasAranyaka~700–500 BCEVedic Sanskrit“Forest texts”; transitional between ritualism and philosophyWritten for hermits in forest; bridge between Brahmanas and Upanishads
8Brihadaranyaka UpanishadUpanishad~700–500 BCEVedic SanskritBrahman, Atman, karma, samsara; dialogue of YajnavalkyaOldest and most important Upanishad; “Great Forest Text”
9Chandogya UpanishadUpanishad~700–500 BCEVedic Sanskrit“Tat tvam asi” (That thou art); Om; Brahman as all; Uddalaka Aruni’s dialoguesFamous mahavakya “Tat tvam asi”; part of Samaveda
10Katha UpanishadUpanishad~500–300 BCESanskritStory of Nachiketa and Yama (Death); inquiry into death and the SelfFamous for Nachiketa’s conversation with Yama; echoed in Bhagavad Gita
11Mundaka UpanishadUpanishad~400–200 BCESanskritTwo kinds of knowledge; Brahman as source of allIndia’s motto “Satyameva Jayate” from 3.1.6
12Mandukya UpanishadUpanishad~300 BCE–100 CESanskritAnalysis of Om (AUM); four states of consciousnessShortest Upanishad; only 12 verses; AUM analysis
🧠 Four Layers of Every Veda

Each Veda has four layers in order: Samhita (hymns and mantras) → Brahmana (ritual commentary in prose) → Aranyaka (forest texts for hermits; bridge to philosophy) → Upanishad (philosophical dialogues; Vedanta). This sequence from outer ritual to inner philosophy is directly tested.

⚔️ Part B — The Two Great Epics (Itihasa)

#TextAuthorPeriodLengthKey ContentKey Exam Fact
1RamayanaValmiki (Adi Kavi)~500–200 BCE ~24,000 shlokas; 7 Kandas Story of Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, Hanuman; exile, Lanka war, Ravana’s defeat First mahakavya (epic poem); Valmiki = “Adi Kavi” (first poet); 7 Kandas (books)
2MahabharataVyasa (Krishna Dvaipayana)~400 BCE–400 CE ~100,000 shlokas; 18 Parvas + Harivamsa Pandavas vs Kauravas; Bhagavad Gita (within it); Kurukshetra war; dharma philosophy World’s longest epic; contains Bhagavad Gita (Bhishma Parva); Vyasa also credited with Puranas

💭 Part C — Philosophical Texts

#TextAuthorPeriodKey TeachingKey Exam Fact
1Bhagavad GitaVyasa (Mahabharata, Bhishma Parva)~200 BCE–200 CEKrishna’s teachings to Arjuna; duty, devotion, knowledge, action18 chapters; 700 verses; Karma Yoga, Jnana Yoga, Bhakti Yoga; part of Mahabharata
2Brahmasutras (Vedanta Sutras)Badarayana (Vyasa)~200 BCE–200 CESystematic analysis of Upanishadic philosophy (Vedanta)Foundation of Vedanta philosophy; Adi Shankaracharya wrote the primary commentary
3Yoga SutrasPatanjali~400 BCE–200 CE8-limbed path (Ashtanga Yoga); concentration, meditation, liberationFoundation of classical Yoga; Patanjali also wrote Mahabhashya (grammar commentary)
4Nyaya SutrasGautama (Akshapada)~150 BCELogic, epistemology, debate; 16 categories of argumentFoundation of Indian logic; Nyaya = one of 6 Astika philosophical schools
5Vaisheshika SutrasKanada~200 BCEAtomic theory; categories (padarthas)Oldest atomic theory; Kanada proposed atoms (paramanu) as building blocks of universe

🕉️ Part D — Puranas, Dharmashastra & Religious Texts

#TextCategoryPeriodKey ContentKey Exam Fact
1ManusmritiDharmashastra~200 BCE–200 CELaws of Manu; social order; caste, gender, kingship rulesMost famous Dharmashastra; Ambedkar burned copies publicly (1927) to protest caste rules
2ArthashastraTreatise on polity~300–100 BCEStatecraft, economic policy, foreign policy, military, espionage; “Saptanga” theory of stateMauryan era; rediscovered by R. Shamasastry (1905); Chanakya = Chandragupta Maurya’s minister
3Vishnu PuranaPurana (Mahapurana)~400 CEVishnu’s incarnations; cosmology; dynastiesOne of 18 Mahapuranas; records dynasties from Manu to Gupta era
4Bhagavata PuranaPurana (Mahapurana)~800–1000 CE10 avatars of Vishnu; Krishna’s life; devotion (bhakti)Most popular Purana; 12 Books; Bhagavatam; basis of Bhakti movement
5Matsya PuranaPurana (Mahapurana)~250–500 CECosmology; dynasties; oldest PuranaFirst of 18 Mahapuranas chronologically; Matsya = fish avatar of Vishnu
6Agni PuranaPurana (Mahapurana)~800–900 CEEncyclopedic; covers all topicsCalled “encyclopedic Purana”; covers rituals, Ayurveda, grammar, metrics
7NatyashastraTreatise on arts~200 BCE–200 CETheory of drama, dance, music; 8 Rasas + 9th (Shanta) added by AbhinavaguptaFoundation of Indian classical dance and theatre; Bharata Muni = first theorist of arts
8KamasutraTreatise~300 CEHuman sexuality, love, family life, social conductBy Vatsyayana; often misunderstood as only erotic; covers all aspects of courtly life
9AshtadhyayiGrammar~400 BCESanskrit grammar; 3,959 sutras; most complete ancient grammarBy Panini; most sophisticated ancient grammar; recognised globally by linguists

🔬 Part E — Scientific, Mathematical & Secular Texts

#TextAuthorPeriodFieldKey ContentKey Exam Fact
1AryabhatiyaAryabhata499 CEMaths, AstronomyPi (3.1416); Earth’s rotation; eclipses; place value systemEarth rotates on axis stated here; Pi to 4 decimal places
2BrahmasphutasiddhantaBrahmagupta628 CEMaths, AstronomyZero as a number; arithmetic with zero and negative numbers; gravityFirst mathematical text to define zero; arithmetic with zero
3Surya SiddhantaUnknown~400–600 CEAstronomyHeliocentric elements; Earth’s diameter; trigonometry (sine)Introduced sine (jya) to Hindu astronomy; influenced Arab astronomy
4Charaka SamhitaCharaka (revised by Dridhabala)~300 BCE–200 CEAyurvedaInternal medicine; Tridosha theory; drugs; patient careFoundation of Ayurveda; Charaka = internal medicine physician
5Sushruta SamhitaSushruta~600 BCE–200 CEAyurveda (surgery)300+ surgical procedures; 120 instruments; rhinoplasty; cataract surgery“Father of Surgery” and “Father of Plastic Surgery”; Varanasi/Benares origin
6Ashtanga HridayamVagbhata~600 CEAyurvedaComprehensive Ayurvedic compendium; combines Charaka and SushrutaThird major Ayurvedic text after Charaka and Sushruta; Vagbhata
7IndicaMegasthenes~300 BCEGeography, HistoryAccount of India under Chandragupta Maurya; society, army, citiesGreek ambassador to Chandragupta’s court; firsthand account of Mauryan India
8AbhijnanasakuntalamKalidasa~4th–5th century CESanskrit dramaStory of Shakuntala and Dushyanta; love and reunionKalidasa’s greatest play; translated by William Jones (1789); “Shakespeare of India”
9MeghadutaKalidasa~4th–5th century CESanskrit poetryCloud messenger poem; yearning yaksha sends message via cloudMost lyrical Sanskrit poem; vivid description of Indian geography
10RaghuvamshaKalidasa~4th–5th century CESanskrit epic poetryDynasty of Raghu (ancestor of Rama); 19 cantosMajor mahakavya; describes Raghu dynasty from Dilipa to Agnivarna
11PanchatantraVishnu Sharma~200 BCE–200 CEFablesAnimal fables; teaching governance to young princes; 5 booksTranslated into 50+ languages; oldest surviving prose fables collection
12MudrarakshasaVishakhadatta~400 CESanskrit dramaStory of Chandragupta Maurya and Chanakya’s diplomacyHistorical play; political intrigue; Chanakya’s strategic role
13SilappadikaramIlango Adigal~200 CETamil epicStory of Kovalan and Kannagi; justice and devotionOldest surviving Tamil epic; written by a Jain monk-prince
14ThirukkuralThiruvalluvar~300 BCE–200 CETamil ethics1,330 couplets on dharma, wealth, love; universal ethics“Bible of Tamil people”; translated into 40+ languages; Thiruvalluvar Day

⚖️ Compare Two Ancient Texts

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📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips

Note 1 — The Four Vedas and Their Key Distinctions

Rigveda = hymns (oldest; 1,028 suktas; Gayatri Mantra at 3.62.10); Samaveda = melodies (chants; basis of music; shortest Veda); Yajurveda = ritual formulae (sacrifice; Krishna/black and Shukla/white divisions); Atharvaveda = spells and medicine (youngest; magic and folk traditions; distinct from the first 3 “trayi”). Each Veda has four layers: Samhita (hymns) → Brahmana (rituals) → Aranyaka (forest) → Upanishad (philosophy).

Note 2 — “Satyameva Jayate” = Mundaka Upanishad 3.1.6

India’s national motto “Satyameva Jayate” (Truth alone triumphs) comes from the Mundaka Upanishad (3.1.6) — NOT from the Rigveda or Bhagavad Gita. The full verse: “Satyameva jayate nanritam” — “Truth alone triumphs, not falsehood.” It is written in Devanagari script on India’s national emblem (Lion Capital of Ashoka). This Mundaka Upanishad → National Motto connection is directly tested in exams.

Note 3 — Kautilya’s Arthashastra: Lost and Found

Kautilya’s Arthashastra was lost for centuries — rediscovered by R. Shamasastry (librarian at the Mysore Oriental Library) in 1905, who published the first edition in 1909. The text reveals a sophisticated understanding of statecraft, espionage, taxation, and trade that was centuries ahead of its time. Kautilya (also called Chanakya or Vishnugupta) was the minister of Chandragupta Maurya. It covers the Saptanga theory of state (seven elements: king, ministers, territory, treasury, army, fort, allies).

Note 4 — Natyashastra and the 9 Rasas

The Natyashastra by Bharata Muni is the foundational text of Indian classical arts. Originally it described 8 Rasas: Shringara (love), Hasya (humour), Karuna (compassion), Raudra (fury), Vira (heroism), Bhayanaka (horror), Bibhatsa (disgust), Adbhuta (wonder). The 9th Rasa — Shanta (peace) — was added later by Abhinavagupta (Kashmiri philosopher-aesthetician, 10th–11th century CE). Today Indian aesthetics recognises 9 Rasas (Navarasas). The 8+1 count with Abhinavagupta’s addition is directly tested.

Note 5 — Tamil Classical Literature

India’s classical texts extend well beyond Sanskrit. The Thirukkural by Thiruvalluvar (1,330 couplets on dharma, wealth, love) is translated into 40+ languages and called the “Bible of Tamil people.” The Silappadikaram (by Ilango Adigal — a Jain monk-prince) is the oldest surviving Tamil epic, telling the story of Kovalan and Kannagi. Together with Manimekalai, these form the twin Tamil epics (~200 CE). Tamil’s Sangam literature proves India’s literary richness extended far beyond Sanskrit traditions.

🧠 Mnemonics — Lock These In

Four Vedas in order (RSYA):
“Rig Sama Yajur Atharva” → Rig = hymns (oldest) | Sama = music | Yajur = ritual | Atharva = spells (youngest)

National motto source:
“Satyameva Jayate = Mundaka Upanishad 3.1.6” — Always remember this pair

Kalidasa’s works (AaMRaKuVi):
Abhijnanasakuntalam (drama) | Meghaduta (lyric poem) | Raghuvamsha (epic) | Kumarasambhava (epic) | Vikramaurvasiya (drama)

Ayurvedic trio in order:
“Charaka (internal medicine) → Sushruta (surgery; rhinoplasty) → Vagbhata (synthesis)”

🃏 Flashcards

Flashcards — Ancient Indian Texts

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🧩 Practice Quiz

Ancient Indian Texts — MCQ Quiz

5 questions · Select an answer · Check your score

Question 1 of 5
India’s national motto “Satyameva Jayate” (Truth alone triumphs) is taken from which ancient text?
A. Rigveda, Book 3
B. Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 18
C. Mundaka Upanishad, 3.1.6
D. Manusmriti, Chapter 2
✅ Explanation

“Satyameva Jayate” is taken from the Mundaka Upanishad (3.1.6) — one of the 108 Upanishads attached to the Atharvaveda. The full verse reads: “Satyameva jayate nanritam” — “Truth alone triumphs, not falsehood.” It is inscribed below the Lion Capital of Ashoka (India’s national emblem) in Devanagari script. This is one of the most directly tested national symbol facts in competitive exams.

Question 2 of 5
The Arthashastra — one of the world’s oldest treatises on statecraft — was written by whom, and when was it rediscovered in modern times?
A. Manu; discovered during Alexander’s invasion of India
B. Patanjali; rediscovered by Max Müller in 1880
C. Kautilya (Chanakya/Vishnugupta); rediscovered by R. Shamasastry in 1905
D. Charaka; discovered during the Mughal period
✅ Explanation

The Arthashastra was written by Kautilya — also known as Chanakya or Vishnugupta — the prime minister of Emperor Chandragupta Maurya. It covers statecraft, economic policy, foreign relations, military strategy, and espionage in extraordinary detail. The text was lost for centuries until R. Shamasastry, a librarian at the Mysore Oriental Library, rediscovered a manuscript in 1905 and published his first translation in 1909.

Question 3 of 5
The Natyashastra by Bharata Muni originally described how many Rasas, and which Rasa was added later by Abhinavagupta?
A. 6 Rasas; the 7th Rasa (Shanta) was added by Abhinavagupta
B. 8 Rasas; the 9th Rasa (Shanta/peace) was added by Abhinavagupta
C. 10 Rasas; Abhinavagupta removed 2 later
D. 4 Rasas; the 4 additional Rasas were added by later commentators
✅ Explanation

The Natyashastra by Bharata Muni originally described 8 Rasas: Shringara (love), Hasya (humour), Karuna (compassion), Raudra (fury), Vira (heroism), Bhayanaka (horror), Bibhatsa (disgust), and Adbhuta (wonder). The 9th Rasa — Shanta (peace/tranquility) — was added later by the Kashmiri philosopher-aesthetician Abhinavagupta (10th–11th century CE). Today Indian aesthetics recognises 9 Rasas (Navarasas).

Question 4 of 5
Which ancient Indian text on surgery first described rhinoplasty (nose reconstruction surgery) and is considered a foundational work in surgical history?
A. Charaka Samhita — by Charaka
B. Sushruta Samhita — by Sushruta
C. Ashtanga Hridayam — by Vagbhata
D. Rigveda Brahmanas
✅ Explanation

The Sushruta Samhita, attributed to the ancient Indian surgeon Sushruta, describes over 300 surgical procedures and 120 surgical instruments. It is the first known text to describe rhinoplasty (nose reconstruction surgery) — using a flap of skin from the cheek or forehead. Sushruta is therefore considered the “Father of Surgery” and “Father of Plastic Surgery.” The text is associated with Varanasi (Benares) and is one of two foundational Ayurvedic texts alongside the Charaka Samhita.

Question 5 of 5
Kalidasa is often called the “Shakespeare of India.” Which of his works is considered the greatest Sanskrit play, and what story does it tell?
A. Meghaduta — a cloud messenger poem about a yearning yaksha
B. Raghuvamsha — an epic about the Raghu dynasty
C. Abhijnanasakuntalam — the story of Shakuntala and King Dushyanta
D. Kumarasambhava — about the birth of the war god Kartikeya
✅ Explanation

Abhijnanasakuntalam (The Recognition of Sakuntala) is considered Kalidasa’s greatest play and one of the masterpieces of world literature. It tells the story of King Dushyanta, who falls in love with Shakuntala (daughter of sage Vishwamitra and Apsara Menaka), marries her in a gandharva marriage, and then forgets her due to a sage’s curse. The play was translated into English by Sir William Jones in 1789 — the first Sanskrit play translated into European languages.

✅ Key Takeaways

Remember These for Your Exam
1
Rigveda is the oldest known Indo-European text (~1500–1200 BCE); 1,028 hymns; Gayatri Mantra at 3.62.10. The four Vedas in order: Rigveda → Samaveda → Yajurveda → Atharvaveda (oldest to youngest). Each has four layers: Samhita → Brahmana → Aranyaka → Upanishad.
2
“Satyameva Jayate” (India’s national motto) is from Mundaka Upanishad 3.1.6 — not the Rigveda or Gita. The Bhagavad Gita is within the Mahabharata (Bhishma Parva) — not a standalone text. 18 chapters, 700 verses; Karma Yoga, Jnana Yoga, Bhakti Yoga.
3
Mahabharata (~100,000 shlokas) is the world’s longest epic. Ramayana (24,000 shlokas, 7 Kandas) is the first mahakavya; Valmiki = “Adi Kavi” (first poet). Kalidasa = “Shakespeare of India”; greatest play = Abhijnanasakuntalam; translated by William Jones (1789).
4
Arthashastra by Kautilya (Chanakya) covers statecraft and Saptanga theory of state. Lost for centuries; rediscovered by R. Shamasastry in 1905 at Mysore Oriental Library. Natyashastra by Bharata Muni: 8 original Rasas + Shanta (9th) added by Abhinavagupta.
5
Sushruta Samhita: “Father of Surgery”; first to describe rhinoplasty; 300+ procedures, 120 instruments; Varanasi. Charaka Samhita: Ayurveda foundation; internal medicine; Tridosha theory. Aryabhatiya (499 CE): Pi = 3.1416; Earth’s rotation on its axis.
6
Vaisheshika Sutras (Kanada) = oldest atomic theory (paramanu); Brahmasphutasiddhanta (Brahmagupta, 628 CE) = first to define zero mathematically. Thirukkural (Thiruvalluvar) = “Bible of Tamil people”; 1,330 couplets; 40+ language translations. Silappadikaram = oldest Tamil epic.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs — Ancient Indian Texts
What are the Vedas and how many are there?

The Vedas are the oldest body of knowledge in Hinduism — ancient Sanskrit texts composed approximately 1500–900 BCE and transmitted orally for centuries before being written down. There are four Vedas: the Rigveda (hymns to deities; oldest Indo-European text with 1,028 suktas), the Samaveda (melodies and chants derived from the Rigveda), the Yajurveda (ritual formulae for sacrificial ceremonies), and the Atharvaveda (spells, charms, and medicinal knowledge; youngest). Each Veda has four sections: Samhita (hymns), Brahmana (ritual commentaries), Aranyaka (forest texts), and Upanishad (philosophical dialogues).

What is the Bhagavad Gita and where does it appear?

The Bhagavad Gita (“Song of the Lord”) is a 700-verse Sanskrit scripture that appears as part of the Mahabharata — specifically within the Bhishma Parva (6th book). It consists of a dialogue between Prince Arjuna and Lord Krishna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, just before the great war begins. Krishna’s teachings cover the three paths to liberation: Karma Yoga (path of action), Jnana Yoga (path of knowledge), and Bhakti Yoga (path of devotion). Commentaries by Adi Shankaracharya, Ramanuja, and Madhva are the most important.

What is the Arthashastra and why is it significant?

The Arthashastra is an ancient Indian treatise on statecraft, economic policy, military strategy, and diplomacy — written by Kautilya (also known as Chanakya or Vishnugupta) around 300 BCE. Chanakya was the prime minister of Emperor Chandragupta Maurya. The Arthashastra covers the Saptanga theory of state (seven elements: king, ministers, territory, treasury, army, fort, and allies), methods of revenue collection, secret agents and espionage, and relationships between states. The text was lost for centuries and rediscovered by R. Shamasastry in 1905 at the Mysore Oriental Library.

Why are ancient Indian texts important for competitive exams?

Ancient texts appear in UPSC Prelims (History + Culture), SSC CGL, Banking GK, Railway exams, and State PSC papers. Common patterns include: Vedas and their content (Rigveda = oldest; Gayatri Mantra; national motto from Mundaka Upanishad), Arthashastra (Kautilya; rediscovered 1905), Natyashastra (Bharata Muni; 9 Rasas), Kalidasa works (Abhijnanasakuntalam; “Shakespeare of India”), Sushruta Samhita (rhinoplasty; Father of Surgery), Charaka Samhita (Ayurveda; internal medicine), Panchatantra (Vishnu Sharma; fables), Thirukkural (Thiruvalluvar; Tamil ethics), and Aryabhatiya (Aryabhata; Pi; Earth’s rotation). This page covers all major ancient text GK patterns for 2026 exams.

Relevant For
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains GS-I SSC CGL Banking GA Railways RRB State PSC Art & Culture GK Ancient History
Prashant Chadha

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