Paper IPaper I · History

The Vedic Age

Early and Later Vedic periods (c. 1500 to 600 BCE): the four Vedas and the wider Vedic corpus, polity, society, economy and religion, the Aryan question, and the Early-versus-Later contrasts, with reference tables and authored CAPF practice

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At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectHistorySyllabusHistory of India: broad understanding of the social, economic and political aspects of Indian history from ancient to modern timesImportanceMedium
Ancient IndiaVedasAryansUpanishadsVarnaVedic Polity

Flagship overview

The Vedic Age (c. 1500 to 600 BCE) is named after the Vedas, the oldest surviving texts of Indian literature, composed in archaic Sanskrit by people who called themselves Aryas (Aryans). The source base is overwhelmingly literary (the Vedic corpus), supplemented by the archaeological Painted Grey Ware (PGW) culture of the later phase. The age is split into two parts: the Early or Rig Vedic period (c. 1500 to 1000 BCE), centred on the Punjab and the Saptasindhu (the land of seven rivers); and the Later Vedic period (c. 1000 to 600 BCE), centred on the Ganga-Yamuna doab and the upper Gangetic plain. Across these two periods, the Aryans move from a pastoral, tribal, semi-nomadic life to a settled agrarian one with territorial kingdoms (janapadas), a more powerful kingship, and a hardening, birth-based varna order.

For CAPF, the Vedic age is a clean static-fact topic. The examiner tests Veda-to-content matching, the wider corpus (Brahmanas, Aranyakas, Upanishads), the source of famous lines (the Gayatri Mantra, "Satyameva Jayate"), and above all the Early-versus-Later contrasts (when iron appears, when varna hardens, which gods rise or fall, which assemblies decline). There is little hard chronology; the marks lie in precise pairings.

Core narrative

The Vedic corpus (sources)

The Vedas are shruti ("that which is heard", revealed) literature. Each Veda has four layers: the Samhita (the core collection of hymns), the Brahmana (prose ritual explanations), the Aranyaka (the "forest texts"), and the Upanishad (the philosophical conclusion). The four Vedas (the Samhitas) are:

  • Rig Veda: the oldest, a collection of 1,028 hymns (suktas) arranged in ten mandalas (books), in praise of the gods. Mandalas II to VII (the "family books") are the oldest core; the first and tenth are later additions.
  • Sama Veda: hymns (mostly borrowed from the Rig Veda) set to melody for chanting at sacrifices; it is the origin of Indian music.
  • Yajur Veda: sacrificial formulae and rituals, in prose and verse, divided into the Shukla (White) and Krishna (Black) recensions.
  • Atharva Veda: charms, spells, magical formulae, and remedies, the latest of the four, reflecting popular and folk belief.

Key associated facts the examiner reuses:

  • The Brahmanas explain the rituals; the Aranyakas treat philosophy and sacrifice symbolically for forest-dwelling hermits; the Upanishads (also called Vedanta, "the end of the Veda") expound the Atman (self) and Brahman (the absolute) and stress knowledge (jnana), karma, and rebirth.
  • The Gayatri Mantra, addressed to the Sun-god Savitri, is from the Rig Veda (Mandala III, by the sage Vishvamitra).
  • The Purushasukta, the hymn that gives the earliest reference to the four varnas (born from the cosmic being Purusha), is in the tenth and latest mandala of the Rig Veda.
  • The national motto "Satyameva Jayate" ("Truth alone triumphs") is from the Mundaka Upanishad.
  • The Vedangas (six limbs of the Veda: Shiksha, Kalpa, Vyakarana, Nirukta, Chhanda, Jyotisha) are auxiliary disciplines for studying the Vedas.

The epics and the wider Sanskrit corpus

Beyond the Vedas, the later tradition produced the two great epics, both treated as Itihasa ("thus it was"). The Ramayana (by Valmiki, the Adikavya or "first poem") and the Mahabharata (by Vyasa, the longest epic in the world, containing the Bhagavad Gita and the dictum "Yato dharmas tato jayah") took shape over a long period straddling the later Vedic and post-Vedic centuries; the examiner may pair author to epic. The smritis (remembered law-texts, including the Dharmasutras) and the six schools of Indian philosophy (the shad-darshanas: Samkhya, Yoga, Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mimamsa, and Vedanta) belong to this broader Brahmanical tradition.

The Aryan question (in brief)

The Vedas describe a people who called themselves Arya, used the horse and the spoked-wheel chariot, herded cattle, and worshipped nature gods. The mainstream scholarly view treats the Aryans as Indo-Aryan-speaking pastoralists associated with the spread of an Indo-European language family. The older "Aryan invasion" framing has given way to ideas of gradual migration and acculturation; the matter is debated and the examiner usually stays with safe, factual points (horse, chariot, Sanskrit hymns, Saptasindhu homeland) rather than the theory.

Early (Rig) Vedic period (c. 1500 to 1000 BCE)

Geography: the core was the Saptasindhu, the land of seven rivers in the Punjab and the north-west, including the Indus and its tributaries. The Rig Veda's most-mentioned river is the Sindhu (Indus); the most revered is the Saraswati ("naditama", the best of rivers).

Polity: the basic unit was the patriarchal family (kula); above it lay the grama (village), the vis (clan), and the jana (tribe). The chief was the rajan, essentially a tribal war-leader, assisted by the purohita (priest) and the senani (army commander). Kingship rested on the tribe (jana), not on territory; there was no concept of a territorial state and no regular standing army or land tax. Two important tribal assemblies checked the chief: the Sabha (a smaller assembly of elders or nobles) and the Samiti (a larger popular assembly that could even choose the rajan). The Vidatha (the oldest assembly) and the Gana are also mentioned. Voluntary tribute and war booty (bali) supported the chief.

Society: society was largely egalitarian and tribal. The varna system existed but was fluid and occupation-based, not yet rigidly hereditary; the four varnas appear together only in the late Purushasukta. Women enjoyed a relatively high position: they could attend the assemblies, were educated, and some (the women seers Lopamudra, Ghosha, Apala, Vishvavara) composed hymns. There was no child marriage and widow remarriage was permitted; the family was patriarchal but monogamy was the norm.

Economy: the economy was primarily pastoral, with cattle as the chief measure of wealth and even of value. Many words for war and wealth derive from the cow: gavishti, literally "the search for cattle", meant war, and the words gotra, godhuli, and duhitri (daughter) are cattle-linked. Agriculture was secondary. Coins were unknown; the nishka and the satamana were ornaments or units of value, not coins. The Battle of Ten Kings (Dasarajna), described in Mandala VII, was fought on the Parushni (Ravi) and won by the Bharata chief Sudas, aided by the priest Vasishtha, against a confederacy of ten tribes.

Religion: nature worship dominated, with hymns personifying natural forces. The most invoked god is Indra (god of war, thunder, and rain, called Purandara, "breaker of forts"), to whom about a quarter of the hymns are addressed. Agni (fire) is the second-most invoked, the intermediary who carries offerings to the gods. Varuna upholds rita, the cosmic and moral order. Other deities include Surya, Savitri, Mitra, the Maruts, and the goddess Ushas (dawn). Worship was through sacrifice (yajna) and prayer; there were no temples and no idol worship.

Later Vedic period (c. 1000 to 600 BCE)

Geography: the focus shifted eastward from the Punjab to the Ganga-Yamuna doab and the upper Gangetic plain. The spread was aided by iron technology (called krishna ayas or shyama ayas, "black metal"), archaeologically marked by the Painted Grey Ware (PGW) culture. Iron axes cleared the dense forest and iron-tipped ploughs opened heavier soils.

Polity: tribes coalesced into larger territorial kingdoms (janapadas), such as Kuru (the merger of Bharatas and Purus) and Panchala. Kingship grew more powerful, hereditary, and territorial. Grand royal sacrifices asserted the king's supremacy: the Rajasuya (the royal consecration), the Ashvamedha (the horse sacrifice claiming sovereignty over all the land the horse roamed), and the Vajapeya (a chariot-race ritual of strength). New officials appear (the sangrahitri or treasurer, the bhagadugha or tax-collector). The Sabha and Samiti survived but declined in importance, and women were now excluded from them.

Society: the varna order hardened into a rigid, birth-based hierarchy, with Brahmanas (priests) and Kshatriyas (warriors and rulers) above the Vaishyas (cultivators and traders) and the Shudras (servants), the last now clearly subordinate. The four ashramas (Brahmacharya the student stage, Grihastha the householder, Vanaprastha the forest-dweller, and the later Sannyasa the renunciate) of the ideal life take shape, though Sannyasa is not yet fully established. The gotra (exogamous lineage) system appears. The position of women declined sharply: they lost their place in the assemblies, lost the right to upanayana in practice, and the birth of a daughter became less welcome. Towards the close of the period, the rigid caste order and the elaborate, expensive ritualism provoked reform, opening the way for Jainism and Buddhism around 600 BCE.

Economy: agriculture became the primary occupation, with the use of iron, the plough, and a wider range of crops (rice, wheat, barley, pulses). Trade, crafts (the carpenter, smith, weaver), and the use of the nishka and other units expanded, but coined money was still absent. Land grants and a more settled village economy emerged.

Religion: the relative importance of the gods shifted. Prajapati (the creator) rose to the head of the pantheon; Vishnu (the preserver) and Rudra-Shiva grew in importance, while the old favourites Indra and Agni declined. Rituals and sacrifices became dominant, elaborate, and costly, and the priestly class gained great power as the indispensable performers. In reaction, the Upanishads, composed late in this period, turned away from sacrifice towards inner knowledge, the unity of Atman and Brahman, and the doctrines of karma and transmigration.

Static facts to memorise

The four Vedas

Veda Content Note
Rig Veda Hymns in praise of gods Oldest; 1,028 hymns in 10 mandalas; Gayatri Mantra (M-III); Purushasukta (M-X)
Sama Veda Hymns set to melody Origin of Indian music; mostly drawn from the Rig Veda
Yajur Veda Sacrificial formulae and rituals Shukla (White) and Krishna (Black) recensions
Atharva Veda Charms, spells, remedies Latest; popular and folk belief

Early versus Later Vedic (the core contrast)

Aspect Early (Rig) Vedic Later Vedic
Dates (approx.) 1500 to 1000 BCE 1000 to 600 BCE
Core region Saptasindhu (Punjab, NW) Ganga-Yamuna doab, upper Gangetic plain
Metal Copper, bronze (no iron) Iron (krishna ayas); PGW culture
Economy Pastoral, cattle as wealth Settled agrarian; iron plough
Polity Tribal (jana); Sabha and Samiti strong Territorial janapadas; king supreme; grand sacrifices
Assemblies Sabha, Samiti, Vidatha active Sabha and Samiti decline; women excluded
Society Fluid, occupation-based varna; women respected Rigid birth-based varna; women's status falls; ashramas and gotra appear
Chief gods Indra, Agni, Varuna Prajapati, Vishnu, Rudra-Shiva

Famous attributions

Item Source
Gayatri Mantra Rig Veda, Mandala III (to Savitri/Sun)
Purushasukta (four varnas) Rig Veda, Mandala X
"Satyameva Jayate" Mundaka Upanishad
"Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam" Maha Upanishad
"Aham Brahmasmi" Brihadaranyaka Upanishad
"Tat tvam asi" Chhandogya Upanishad
Battle of Ten Kings (Dasarajna) Rig Veda, Mandala VII (on the Parushni/Ravi)
Atman-Brahman philosophy Upanishads (Vedanta)

Vedic deities and their domains

Deity Domain
Indra War, thunder, rain; most invoked; "Purandara" (fort-breaker)
Agni Fire; the intermediary between gods and humans; second-most invoked
Varuna The cosmic and moral order (rita); the waters
Surya / Savitri The Sun (the Gayatri Mantra addresses Savitri)
Soma The sacred drink and its deity
Ushas The dawn (a prominent goddess)
Maruts Storm gods
Yama The god of death
Prajapati (Later Vedic) The creator, head of the pantheon
Vishnu and Rudra (Later Vedic) Preserver and the fierce god (later Shiva), rising in importance

Vedic terms the examiner reuses

Term Meaning
Jana The tribe, the basic political unit of the early period
Vis The clan, between the village and the tribe
Rajan The tribal chief or king
Purohita and Senani The priest and the army-commander
Bali Voluntary tribute or offering to the chief
Niska / Satamana Gold ornaments used as units of value (not coins)
Krishna ayas "Black metal", iron, of the Later Vedic period
Dasa / Dasyu Non-Aryan peoples / enemies in the Rig Veda
Gotra An exogamous lineage (a Later Vedic concept)

How CAPF asks it

Formats are matching and single-correct, with statement-based questions on the Early-versus-Later contrast. Match Veda to content; identify the source of a famous line; identify which feature belongs to which period; identify which god rose or declined.

Authored practice (with answers):

Q1The Sama Veda is associated with:
  1. Acharms and spells
  2. Bsacrificial rituals
  3. Chymns set to music
  4. Dstatecraft. Answer:
  5. C. The Sama Veda set hymns to melody and is the origin of Indian music.
Q2The four varnas are mentioned together for the first time in the:
  1. AAtharva Veda
  2. BPurushasukta of the Rig Veda
  3. CMundaka Upanishad
  4. DYajur Veda. Answer:
  5. B. The Purushasukta in the tenth mandala gives the earliest reference to the four varnas.
Q3Which of the following is correct about the Later Vedic period?
  1. ACattle was the main wealth
  2. BIndra was the chief god
  3. CIron came into use and kingship became territorial
  4. DWomen attended the Samiti. Answer:
  5. C. Later Vedic society used iron and formed territorial janapadas; women were excluded from the assemblies.
Q4The national motto "Satyameva Jayate" is taken from the:
  1. ARig Veda
  2. BMundaka Upanishad
  3. CBhagavad Gita
  4. DManusmriti. Answer:
  5. B. It is from the Mundaka Upanishad.
Q5In the Rig Veda, the god to whom the largest number of hymns is addressed is:
  1. AAgni
  2. BVaruna
  3. CIndra
  4. DSurya. Answer:
  5. C. Indra, god of war and rain, is the most invoked deity.
Q6The Battle of Ten Kings (Dasarajna) was fought on the banks of the river:
  1. ASindhu
  2. BSaraswati
  3. CParushni
  4. DYamuna. Answer:
  5. C. It was fought on the Parushni (Ravi); the Bharata chief Sudas won.
Q7Which sacrifice was performed by a Later Vedic king to assert sovereignty over all the land a horse could roam?
  1. ARajasuya
  2. BVajapeya
  3. CAshvamedha
  4. DAgnishtoma. Answer:
  5. C. The Ashvamedha (horse sacrifice) claimed sovereignty over the territory the horse traversed.

Common confusion

  • Sabha versus Samiti: the Sabha was the smaller assembly of elders or nobles; the Samiti was the larger popular assembly that could choose the rajan. Both decline in the Later Vedic period.
  • Vedanta versus the Vedas: "Vedanta" means the Upanishads (the end of the Veda), not the Vedas as a whole.
  • Indra (most-invoked, war and rain) versus Agni (intermediary, fire) versus Varuna (cosmic order, rita). The examiner pairs each god with its function.
  • Gayatri Mantra is from the Rig Veda; "Satyameva Jayate" is from the Mundaka Upanishad. Do not swap.
  • Early Vedic is pastoral with no iron; Later Vedic is agrarian with iron (PGW). The arrival of iron marks the boundary.
  • Rajasuya (consecration), Ashvamedha (horse sacrifice for sovereignty), Vajapeya (chariot-race strength ritual) are Later Vedic royal rites.

Memory hook

  • Veda order and content: "Rig hymns, Sama sings, Yajur sacrifices, Atharva cures." (RSYА: hymns, music, ritual, charms.)
  • Early Vedic gods: "IAV" (Indra, Agni, Varuna). Later Vedic gods: "PVR" (Prajapati, Vishnu, Rudra).
  • Saptasindhu = seven rivers = early home; "doab" = Later Vedic home (Ganga-Yamuna).

Night before

  • Four Vedas: Rig (hymns, oldest, 1,028 hymns in 10 mandalas), Sama (music), Yajur (ritual), Atharva (charms, latest).
  • Brahmanas (ritual), Aranyakas (forest), Upanishads (philosophy, = Vedanta).
  • Gayatri Mantra from Rig Veda (M-III); Purushasukta (four varnas) from M-X; "Satyameva Jayate" from Mundaka Upanishad.
  • Early Vedic: pastoral, cattle-wealth, tribal jana, Sabha and Samiti strong, fluid varna, respected women, gods Indra-Agni-Varuna.
  • Later Vedic: iron (PGW), agrarian, territorial janapadas, Rajasuya and Ashvamedha and Vajapeya, rigid varna, women excluded, gods Prajapati-Vishnu-Rudra.
  • Battle of Ten Kings (Dasarajna) on the Parushni (Ravi); Bharata chief Sudas won.
  • Gavishti ("search for cattle") meant war; nishka was a unit of value, not a coin.
  • No temples and no idol worship in the Vedic age; worship was by yajna.

One-line recall

  • The Vedic age (c. 1500 to 600 BCE) is named after the Vedas, the oldest Indian texts, in Sanskrit.
  • Sources are mainly literary (the Vedic corpus); the Later Vedic phase aligns with the PGW archaeological culture.
  • Four Vedas: Rig (hymns), Sama (music), Yajur (rituals), Atharva (charms); the Rig is oldest, the Atharva latest.
  • The corpus has four layers: Samhita, Brahmana, Aranyaka, Upanishad; the Upanishads are called Vedanta.
  • The Gayatri Mantra is from the Rig Veda (Mandala III), addressed to the Sun (Savitri).
  • The four varnas first appear together in the Purushasukta, Mandala X of the Rig Veda.
  • "Satyameva Jayate" is from the Mundaka Upanishad.
  • Early Vedic society was pastoral, tribal, and largely egalitarian, with cattle as wealth.
  • The Sabha and Samiti were the two key tribal assemblies of the early period.
  • Indra (war and rain) was the most invoked Rig Vedic god; Agni was the intermediary; Varuna upheld rita.
  • The Battle of Ten Kings (Dasarajna) was fought on the Parushni (Ravi); the Bharata chief Sudas won.
  • Later Vedic society moved east to the Ganga-Yamuna doab, used iron, and became agrarian.
  • Kingship became territorial and hereditary, asserted through the Rajasuya, Ashvamedha, and Vajapeya sacrifices.
  • The varna order hardened into a rigid, birth-based hierarchy; the ashramas and gotra appear.
  • Women's status declined and they were excluded from the assemblies in the Later Vedic age.
  • Prajapati, Vishnu, and Rudra-Shiva rose while Indra and Agni declined.
  • Elaborate, costly ritualism and caste rigidity set the stage for Jainism and Buddhism around 600 BCE.
  • There were no temples or idol worship; the sacrifice (yajna) was the main mode of worship.

Glossary

  • Shruti: "that which is heard", the revealed Vedic literature.
  • Samhita: the core collection of hymns of each Veda.
  • Brahmana, Aranyaka, Upanishad: the prose ritual, forest, and philosophical layers attached to each Veda.
  • Vedanta: literally "the end of the Veda", the Upanishads.
  • Saptasindhu: "the land of seven rivers", the Punjab and the north-west, the early Vedic home.
  • Janapada: a settled territorial kingdom of the Later Vedic period.
  • Rajan: the tribal chief or king of the early period.
  • Sabha and Samiti: the smaller (elders) and larger (popular) tribal assemblies.
  • Varna: the fourfold social order (Brahmana, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra).
  • Ashrama: a stage of the ideal life (Brahmacharya, Grihastha, Vanaprastha, Sannyasa).
  • Gotra: an exogamous lineage tracing descent from a common ancestor.
  • Yajna: the Vedic sacrifice, the central act of worship.
  • Rita: the cosmic and moral order upheld by Varuna.
  • Gavishti: literally "the search for cattle", the Rig Vedic word for war.
  • Nishka: an ornament that served as a unit of value (not a coin).
  • Painted Grey Ware (PGW): the iron-age archaeological culture of the Later Vedic doab.
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