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− | '''''Gautama Dharmasūtra''''' is a Sanskrit text and likely one of the oldest [[Hinduism|Hindu]] [[Dharmasutras]] (600-200 BCE), whose manuscripts have survived into the modern age. | + | '''''Gautama Dharmasūtra''''' is a Sanskrit text and likely one of the oldest whose manuscripts have survived into the modern age. |
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| The ''Gautama Dharmasutra'' was composed and survives as an independent treatise, unattached to a complete [[Kalpa (Vedanga)|Kalpa-sūtras]], but like all Dharmasutras it may have been part of one whose Shrauta- and Grihya-sutras have been lost to history. The text belongs to [[Samaveda]] schools, and its 26th chapter on penance theory is borrowed almost completely from Samavidhana [[Brahmana]] layer of text in the [[Samaveda]]. | | The ''Gautama Dharmasutra'' was composed and survives as an independent treatise, unattached to a complete [[Kalpa (Vedanga)|Kalpa-sūtras]], but like all Dharmasutras it may have been part of one whose Shrauta- and Grihya-sutras have been lost to history. The text belongs to [[Samaveda]] schools, and its 26th chapter on penance theory is borrowed almost completely from Samavidhana [[Brahmana]] layer of text in the [[Samaveda]]. |
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| ==Authorship == | | ==Authorship == |
− | {{Quote box
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− | |quote = '''Testimony during a trial'''
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− | <poem>
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− | The witness must take an oath before deposing.
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− | Single witness normally does not suffice.
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− | As many as three witnesses are required.
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− | False evidence must face sanctions.
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− | </poem>
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− | |source = — ''Gautama Dharmasutras 13.2-13.6'' {{Sfn|Robert Lingat|1973|p=69}}{{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=100-101}}
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− | |bgcolor=#FFE0BB
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− | |align = right
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− | }}
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| The Dharmasutra is attributed to Gautama, a [[Brahmin]] family name, many of whose members founded the various [[Shakha]]s (Vedic schools) of [[Samaveda]]. The text was likely composed in the Ranayaniya branch of [[Samaveda]] tradition, generally corresponding to where modern Maratha people reside ([[Maharashtra]]-[[Gujarat]]). The text is likely ascribed to revered sage Gautama of a remote era, but authored by members of this Samaveda school as an independent treatise. | | The Dharmasutra is attributed to Gautama, a [[Brahmin]] family name, many of whose members founded the various [[Shakha]]s (Vedic schools) of [[Samaveda]]. The text was likely composed in the Ranayaniya branch of [[Samaveda]] tradition, generally corresponding to where modern Maratha people reside ([[Maharashtra]]-[[Gujarat]]). The text is likely ascribed to revered sage Gautama of a remote era, but authored by members of this Samaveda school as an independent treatise. |
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| | width=80px | 1.1-4 | | | width=80px | 1.1-4 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Origins and reliable sources of law | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Origins and reliable sources of law |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|p=78}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |} | | |} |
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| | width=80px | 2.1-2.51 | | | width=80px | 2.1-2.51 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | General rules, conduct towards teachers, food, graduation | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | General rules, conduct towards teachers, food, graduation |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=80-83}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |} | | |} |
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| | width=80px | 3.1-3.36 | | | width=80px | 3.1-3.36 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Student, monk, anchorite | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Student, monk, anchorite |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=83-84}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 4.1-8.25 | | | width=80px | 4.1-8.25 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Household, marriage, rituals, gifts, respect for guests, behavior during times of crisis and adversity, interaction between Brahmin and the King, Ethics and virtues | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Household, marriage, rituals, gifts, respect for guests, behavior during times of crisis and adversity, interaction between Brahmin and the King, Ethics and virtues |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=84-91}}{{Sfn|Daniel H.H. Ingalls|2013|pp=89-90}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Kedar Nath Tiwari |title=Classical Bharat's Ethical Thought |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=SNYS_IlSXYsC |year=1998|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1607-7 |pages=88–90 }}</ref> | + | | width=80px | <ref>{{cite book|author=Kedar Nath Tiwari |title=Classical Bharat's Ethical Thought |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=SNYS_IlSXYsC |year=1998|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1607-7 |pages=88–90 }}</ref> |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 9.1-9.74 | | | width=80px | 9.1-9.74 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Graduates | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Graduates |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=91-93}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 10.1-10.66 | | | width=80px | 10.1-10.66 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Four social classes, their occupations, rules of violence during war, tax rates, proper tax spending, property rights | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Four social classes, their occupations, rules of violence during war, tax rates, proper tax spending, property rights |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=94-96}}<ref>{{cite journal | last=Penna | first=L. R. | title=Written and customary provisions relating to the conduct of hostilities and treatment of victims of armed conflicts in ancient India | journal=International Review of the Red Cross | publisher=Cambridge University Press | volume=29 | issue=271 | year=1989 | pages=333-348 | doi=10.1017/s0020860400074519 }}</ref> | + | | width=80px | <ref>{{cite journal | last=Penna | first=L. R. | title=Written and customary provisions relating to the conduct of hostilities and treatment of victims of armed conflicts in ancient India | journal=International Review of the Red Cross | publisher=Cambridge University Press | volume=29 | issue=271 | year=1989 | pages=333-348 | doi=10.1017/s0020860400074519 }}</ref> |
| |} | | |} |
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| | width=80px | 11.1-11.32 | | | width=80px | 11.1-11.32 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | The king and his duties, Judicial process | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | The king and his duties, Judicial process |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=96- 98}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 12.1-13.31 | | | width=80px | 12.1-13.31 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Criminal and civil law categories, contract and debts, theory of punishment, rules of trial, witnesses | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Criminal and civil law categories, contract and debts, theory of punishment, rules of trial, witnesses |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=98-101}}{{Sfn|Daniel H.H. Ingalls|2013|pp=89-90}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |} | | |} |
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| | width=80px | 14.1-14.46 | | | width=80px | 14.1-14.46 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Death in a family, cremation, impurities and purification after handling corpse | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Death in a family, cremation, impurities and purification after handling corpse |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=101-103}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 15.1-15.29 | | | width=80px | 15.1-15.29 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Rites of passage for ancestors and the death of loved ones | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Rites of passage for ancestors and the death of loved ones |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=103-106}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 16.1-16.49 | | | width=80px | 16.1-16.49 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Self-study of texts, recitation, annual suspension of Vedic readings | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Self-study of texts, recitation, annual suspension of Vedic readings |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=107-108}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 17.1-17.38 | | | width=80px | 17.1-17.38 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Food, health, prohibition on killing or harming animals to produce food | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Food, health, prohibition on killing or harming animals to produce food |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=108-109}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 18.1-18.23 | | | width=80px | 18.1-18.23 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Marriage, remarriage, child custody disputes | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Marriage, remarriage, child custody disputes |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=110-111}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |} | | |} |
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| | width=80px | 18.24-21.22 | | | width=80px | 18.24-21.22 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Seizure of property, excommunication, expulsion, readmission, sins | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Seizure of property, excommunication, expulsion, readmission, sins |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=111-115}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 22.1-23.34 | | | width=80px | 22.1-23.34 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Penances for killings animals, adultery, illicit sex, eating meat, different types of penances | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Penances for killings animals, adultery, illicit sex, eating meat, different types of penances |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=115-118}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |} | | |} |
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| | width=80px | 28.1-28.47 | | | width=80px | 28.1-28.47 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Inheritance rights of sons and daughters on man's property, on woman's property, levirate, estates, partition of property between relatives | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Inheritance rights of sons and daughters on man's property, on woman's property, levirate, estates, partition of property between relatives |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=118-126}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |-style="text-align: center;" | | |-style="text-align: center;" |
| | width=80px | 28.48-28.53 | | | width=80px | 28.48-28.53 |
| | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Resolving disputes and doubts within law | | | width= 450px style="text-align: left;" | Resolving disputes and doubts within law |
− | | width=80px | {{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|p=126}} | + | | width=80px | |
| |} | | |} |
| |} | | |} |
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| but among them he should attend chiefly to righteousness. | | but among them he should attend chiefly to righteousness. |
| </poem> | | </poem> |
− | |source = — ''Gautama Dharmasutra 9.46-9.47''{{sfn|Patrick Olivelle|1999|pp=92-93}} | + | |source = — ''Gautama Dharmasutra 9.46-9.47'' |
| |bgcolor=#FFE0BB | | |bgcolor=#FFE0BB |
| |align = right | | |align = right |