Samaveda
The
Samaveda (
Sanskrit: सामवेद,
sāmaveda, a
tatpurusha compound of
' "ritual chant" + ' "knowledge" ), is third in the usual order of enumeration of the four
Vedas, the ancient core
Hindu scriptures.
The Samaveda ranks next in sanctity and liturgical importance to the
Rigveda or Veda of Recited praise. Its Sanhita, or metrical portion, consists chiefly of hymns to be chanted by the Udgatar priests at the performance of those important sacrifices in which the juice of the
Soma plant, clarified and mixed with milk and other ingredients, was offered in libation to various deities. The Sama Veda was compiled around
1300-
1000 BC.
The Collection is made up of hymns, portions of hymns, and detached verses, taken mainly from the
Rigveda, transposed and re-arranged, without reference to their original order, to suit the religious ceremonies in which they were to be employed. The verses are not intended to be chanted, but to be sung in specifically indicated melodies using the seven
svaras or notes. Such songs are called
Samagana and in this sense the Samaveda is really a book of hymns.
In these compiled hymns there are frequent variations, of more or less importance, from the text of the Rigveda as we now possess it which variations, although in some cases they are apparently explanatory, seem in others to be older and more original than the readings of the
Rigveda. In singing, the verses are still further altered by prolongation, repetition and insertion of syllables, and various modulations, rests, and other modifications prescribed, for the guidance of the officiating priests, in the Ganas or Song-books. Two of these manuals, the Gramageyagana, or Congregational, and the Aranyagana or Forest Song-Book, follow the order of the verses of part I, of the Sanhita, and two others, the Uhagana, the Uhyagana, of Part II. This part is less disjointed than part I, and is generally arranged in triplets whose first verse is often the repetition of a verse that has occurred in part I.
The Samaveda survives in a single
shakha or recension, the Kauthuma shakha, with a second shakha, Jaiminiya (or Talavakara), surviving fragmentarily, the Jaiminiya Samhita. From the Jaiminiya shakha, we also have the
Jaiminiya Brahmana, the
Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana and the
Kena Upanishad.
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Hinduism*
Vedas*
Vedic religionSince the Samaveda is written in verse it can be sung. This decade has seen a poetic translation of Samveda in Hindi. This translation was done by Dr. Mridul Kirti and is called "Samveda Ka Hindi Padyanuvad"
Sama Veda had originally 1000 sakhas.Here are the names of some of them -
1. Ranayana2. Shatyamukhya3. Vyasa4. Bhaguri5. Oulundi6. Goulgulvi7. Bhanuman-oupamayava8. Karati9. Mashaka Gargya10. Varsgagavya11 Kuthuma12. sgakugitra13. Jaimini
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Hymns of the Sama-veda at sacred-texts.com
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Veda Prasar Samiti (MP3 CDs, good quality) *
Gateway for India (free MP3s) *http://www.sanskritweb.net/samaveda/ (Samaveda Song Books in Devanagari with svara marks and musical notes)