Srimad Valmiki Ramayana is an epic poem of India which narrates the journey of Virtue
to annihilate vice. Sri Rama is the Hero and aayana His journey.
We in India believe that Sri Rama lived in Treta Yug, millennia BC and we are presently concerned with what
Srimad Valmiki Ramayana tells us, rather than when it was told.
This epic poem
Ramayana is a smriti which is translated as "from memory". Given the
antiquity of Srimad Valmiki Ramayana, there have been some interjected verses.
Sometimes these verses can be contradicting. However, scholars,
grammarians, historians have put lot of effort to standardize the original
text, by verifying various manuscripts available from various parts of
India, thus trying to stabilize and save the text from further contradictions.
An example of this effort is the critical edition of Srimad Valmiki Ramayana.
This site aims to study various versions of Srimad Valmiki Ramayana and arrive
at a version of Ramayana that is most relevant to modern times.
Srimad Valmiki Ramayana is composed of verses called Sloka, in Sanskrit
language, which is an ancient language from India
and a complex meter called Anustup. These verses are grouped into individual
chapters called Sargas, wherein a specific event or intent is told. These
chapters or sargas are grouped into books called Kaandas where Kaanda means
the inter-node stem of sugar cane, or also a particular phase of the story
or an event in the course of story telling.
The Ramayan
(Devanāgarī: Rāmāyana) is an ancient
Sanskrit epic attributed to the poet Valmiki and an important part of the Hindu
canon (smrti). The name Rāmāyan is a tatpurusha
compound of Rām and ayan "going, advancing",
translating to "Rām's Journey".
The Ramayana is
ascribed to a single author, Vālmiki. The Rāmāyan consists of
24,000 verses in seven cantos (kāndas) and tells the
story of Rama, whose wife Sita is abducted by the demon (Rākshas)
king of Lanka, Rāvan. Verses are written in thirty two syllable meter
called Anustubh.
Valmiki Ramayana
has been traditionally divided into seven cantos (books), dealing with the life
of Rama from his birth to his death.
1. Bala Kanda – Book of the
young Rama which details the miraculous birth of Rama, his early life in
Ayodhya, his slaying of the demons of the forest at the request of Vishvamitra
and his wedding with Sita.
2. Ayodhya Kanda – Book of Ayodhya
in which Dasharatha comes to grief over his promise to Kaikeyi and the start of
Rama's exile.
3. Aranya Kanda – Book of the Forest which describes Rama's life in the forest and the
abduction of Sita by Ravana.
4. Kishkindha Kanda – Book of
Kishkindha, the Vanara kingdom in which Rama befriends Sugreeva and the
Vanara army and begins the search for Sita.
5. Sundara Kanda – Book of Sundar
(Hanuman) in which Hanuman travels to Lanka and finds Sita imprisoned there and
brings back the good news to Rama.
6. Yuddha Kanda Book of the War,
which narrates the Rama-Ravana war and the return of the successful Rama to
Ayodhya and his coronation.
7. Uttara Kanda – Epilogue, which
details the life of Rama and Sita after their return to Ayodhya, Sita's
banishment and how Sita and Rama pass on to the next world.
Traditionally the
epic belongs to the Treta Yuga, one of the four eons (yug) of Hindu chronology.
Ram is said to have been born in the Treta Yug to King Daśarath in Ikshvaku
Vansh.
The exact date of
creation of Ramayana is unknown, and is estimated to lie between the 10th and
5th century B.C. As per the traditional astronomical back-projection by the
Vedic system, the events of the war between Rama and Ravana happened 9299 years
ago, as of November 3, 2007. It should be added that attempts to date events or
read history or allegory from astronomical descriptions are quite exact, yet
they tend to be heavily contested.
The story of Ram
also inspired a large amount of latter-day literature in various languages,
notable among which are the works of the sixteenth century Hindi poet Tulsidas,
Tamil poet Kambar of the 13th century Molla Ramayanam in Telugu and the 14th
century Kannada poet Narahari Kavi`s Torave Ramayan. The Ramayan became popular
in Southeast Asia during the 8th century and
manifested itself in text, temple architecture and performance.
The discovery of
the Ram Setu (Rama's Bridge) between India
and Sri Lanka
has leant strong support to the epic being based on real events.
Reference:
- Wikipedia. (2007). At http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramayana.
- Webdunia. (2007). At http://hindi.webdunia.com/religion/religion/hindu/ramcharitmanas/
0 comments