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LECTURE X - The Law-books. Mainu continued

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

Monier Williams
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

THE Code of the Mānavas, which we have assigned in its present form to about the fifth century b.c. (see p. 215), and which for convenience we may call ‘Manu's Law-book,’ is a metrical version of the traditions (smṛiti) of the Mānavas, probably before embodied in their Gṛihya and Sāmayāćārika Sūtras (p. 214), the metre being Anushtubh or that of the common Ṥloka (p. 166). My aim in the present Lecture will be to analyze and arrange in a connected manner the contents of the Code, offering prose translations of selected passages and pointing out in a general way the characteristic features of (1) its sacred knowledge and religion, (2) its philosophy, (3) its Āćāra or ‘social rules and caste organization,’ (4) its Vyavahāra or ‘criminal and civil laws and rules of government,’ (5) its system of Prāyaś-ćitta or ‘penance,’ (6) its system of Karma-phala or ‘future recompenses of acts done in this life.’ In the next Lecture I propose to give specimens of the most striking passages, under the last four heads, in a metrical English version.

I. First, then, as to its religious teaching. We may notice that this generally agrees with the later Vedic period, especially that represented by the Purusha-sūkta and some of the Brāhmaṇas.

Type
Chapter
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Indian Wisdom
Examples of the Religious, Philosophical, and Ethical Doctrines of the Hindus
, pp. 221 - 281
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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