Gathas
The
Gathas (Gāθās) are the most sacred of the texts of the
Zoroastrian faith, and are traditionally believed to have been composed by
Zarathushtra (Zoroaster) himself.
The Gathas are in verse, metrical in the nature of ancient
Indo-Iranian religious poetry, which is extremely terse, and in which grammatical constructs are an exception.
The 17 hymns of the Gathas consist of 238 verses, of about 1300 lines or 6000 words in total. They were later incorporated into the 72-chapter
Yasna (chapter:
ha or
had, from the
Avestan ha'iti, 'cut'), which in turn is the primary liturgical collection of texts within the greater compendium of the
Avesta. The 17 hymns are identified by their chapter numbers in the
Yasna, and are divided into five major sections:
| 28-34 | | Ahunavaiti Gatha | | 'Sovereign Lord', 100 stanzas, (3 verses, 7+9 syllable meter) | | 43-46 | | Ushtavaiti Gatha | | 'Radiant Happiness', 66 stanzas (5 verses, 4+7 syllable meter) |
| 47-50 | | Spenta Mainyu Gatha | | 'Positive Emanation', 41 stanzas (4 verses, 4+7 syllable meter) |
| 51 | | Vohu Khshathra Gatha | | 'Good Kingdom', 22 stanzas (3 verses, 7+7 syllable meter) |
| 53 | | Vahishto Ishti Gatha | | 'Spiritual Wisdom', 9 stanzas (4 verses, two of 7+5/two of 7+5+5 syllables) |
With the exception of
Ahunavaiti Gatha, which is named after the
Ahuna Vairya prayer (
Yasna 27, not in the Gathas), the names of the Gathas reflect the first word(s) of the first hymn within them.
The sequential order of the Gathas is structurally interrupted by the
Yasna Haptanghāiti ("seven-chapter
Yasna", chapters 35-42), which is almost as old as the Gathas.
The language of the Gathas,
Gathic or
Old Avestan, belongs to the old
Indo-Iranian language group which is a sub-group of Eastern families of the
Indo-European languages. Much of what is understood of Gathic Avestan, both in vocabulary and grammar, is only due to Gathic Avestan's close affinity to an early form of
Vedic Sanskrit.
It must be noted that the Gathas are in an otherwise unknown language. The dependency on Vedic Sanskrit is a significant weakness in the interpretation of the Gathas, as the two languages, though from a common origin, had developed independently.
Sassanid era translations and commentaries (the
Zend) have been used to interpret the Gathas, but by the 3rd century the Avestan language was vitually extinct, and a dependency of the medieval texts is often discouraged as the commentaries are frequently conjectural. While some scholars argue that an interpretation using younger texts is inadvisable (Geldner, Humbach), others argue that such a view is excessively skeptical (
Spiegel, Darmesteter). The risks of mis-interpretation are real, but lacking alternates, such dependencies are perforce necessary.
There are three monumental translations of the Gathas worth noting: The earlier
James Darmesteter version (
'Zend-Avesta III, SBE 31, 1887) which is based on a translation "from below", that is, based on the later middle Persian commentaries and translations. The other two are Helmut Humbach's
The Gathas of Zarathushtra (Heidelberg, 1959, repr. 1991), and Stanley Isler's
The Gathas of Zarathustra (Acta Iranica IV, Leiden, 1975), both of which exploit the "Vedic" approach.
Some of the verses of the Gathas are directly addressed to the Omniscient Creator
Ahura Mazda. These verses, devotional in character, expound on the divine essences of truth, the good-mind, and the spirit of righteousness. Some other verses are addressed to the public that may have come to hear the Prophet, and in these he exhorts his audience to live a life as Ahura Mazda has directed, and pleads to Ahura Mazda to intervene on their behalf.
Other verses, from which some aspects of Zoroaster's life have been inferred, are semi-(auto)biographical, but all revolve around Zarathustra's mission to promote his view of the Truth. For instance, some of the passages describe Zarathustra's first attempts to promote the teachings of Ahura Mazda, and the subsequential rejection by his kinsmen. This and other rejection led him to have doubts about his message, and in the Gathas he asked for assurance from Ahura Mazda, and requests repudiation of his opponents.
The various hymns appear to have been composed at different periods in his life, and read chronologically, a certain earnestness and conviction in his message are apparent. While in earlier verses, Zarathustra occasionally expresses his doubts on his own suitability of the mission, he never wavers in his conviction that the message is correct. A tone of contentment and belief in his vindication is apparent only in the last few hymns, and to the last, where he officiates at the wedding of his youngest daughter, he remains the persevering predicant.
Aspects of Zoroastrian philosophy are distributed over the entire collection of Gathas. There is no systematic arrangement of the doctrine of Zarathustra in the texts.
*
Translations of the Yasna at avesta.org *
Article on The Gathas at the The Circle of Ancient Iranian Studies*
Gathas entry in the
Encyclopedia Iranica