- Essay
summarizes the general structural and nomenclatural similarities between the
Zoroastrian and the Vedic systems. It hopes to show that the Zoroastrian
innovations on the prior Vedic system in Iran have parallels in the adaptations
that were taking place in India in the Puranic period.
Scholars
generally agree that before the advent of Zarathushtra, religion of the devas
was current in Iran. For want of a better term, some have called the pre-Zoroastrian
religion Persian paganism.1
But
here we argue that to do so is to obscure its connections with the Vedic
religion. The similarities between the pre Zoroastrian Persian religion and the
Vedic religion are too many to give it any other name. The term Zoroastrian is
after the Greek version of the name of the prophet Zarathushtra (zarat, like Sanskrit harit, golden; ustra, Sanskrit or Old Persian for camel) who has been variously
estimated to have lived either around the time 1200 BC or perhaps half a
millennium later. A Greek tradition assigns him to an age 258 years prior to
Alexander i.e. 6th century BC. 2
The
name by which the Zoroastrians call their own religion is Mazdayasna, the
religion of Ahura Mazda (Sanskrit Asura Medha, Lord of Wisdom). The Rgveda
8.6.10 has the expression medham rtasya,
wisdom of truth. Zarathushtra presented his religion as rival to the religion
of the daevas i.e. Daevayasna. Zarathushtra came
from Bactria in northeast Iran, near Afghanistan.
The
Avesta speaks of several lands that include the Sapta Sindhu (Sindhu-Sarasvati
region of North and Northwest India). The scripture of the Zoroastrians is the
Avesta. It includes the Yasna (Sanskrit yajna)
with the Gathas of Zarathushtra, Videvdat or Vendidad (Vi-daeva-dat, anti Daeva),
and Yast (hymn), which are hymns for worship.
During
the Sasanian period the Avesta was translated into Pahlavi and this version is
called Zend Avesta. The Zoroastrians speak
of mathra (Skt. mantra) as utterances that accompany meditation.
Like the Vedic tripartite division of society, the Zoroastrians have the classes priests (zaotar), warriors (nar), and pasturers (vastar).
It
has been assumed formerly that the daevas of the Mazda faith are the same as
the Vedic devas and therefore Zarathushtra inverted the deva-asura dichotomy of
the Vedic period. In reality, the situation is more complex and the Vedic and
the Zarathushtrian systems are much less different than is generally supposed.
From
Kashmir, which belongs square within the Vedic world, comes crucial evidence
regarding a three-way division consisting of devas, asuras, and daevas.
The
scheme reflects the three-way division that is basic to Vedic thought. These
three divisions in the outer realm are the earth, atmosphere, and the sun; in
the inner world they are the body, breath (prana), and consciousness or atman.
This tripartite classification is mirrored in the gunas of Indian thought:
sattva, rajas, and tamas.
Deva, or devata
(heavens, sattva): power related to
understanding Vedic Religion in Ancient Iran.
Asura (atmosphere, rajas): power related to activity.
Daeva (earth, body, tamas): power related to acquisitiveness.
Kashmiri
folklore has many tales where daevas
are counterpoints to devas and asuras. Sometimes the term raksasa is used as a synonym for daeva.
This term raksasa occurs very frequently in Sanskrit literature. The word raksas
appears in the Rgveda, the Aitareya Brahmana and other texts; it is also
considered equivalent to Nirrti. The raksasa form
of marriage is the violent seizure or rape of a girl after the defeat or
destruction of her relatives.
It
is entirely possible that the term daeva
came into Kashmir late as a result of the immigration of Persians. If that were
the case, the reason why it took root is because it served as a synonym for an
existing idea. It is equally possible that the term has been current in Kashmir
from ancient times and its usage there parallels that by Zarathushtra from the
nearby Bactria. Further support for this view comes from the fact that the Kashmiri Hindus, who have remained isolated from any
Persian immigrations of the last few centuries, follow many practices that are
prescribed for Zoroastrians. These include the sacred thread for women
(called aetapan in Kashmiri) and the
sacred shirt (sadr).
The
Vedic view of seeing the world in triple categories was in the later Puranic
gloss simplified into dichotomies like that of deva versus asura (including
raks asa). Zarathusthra made a similar simplification using the dichotomy of
asura (including deva under the label yazata) and daeva. The asuras are the
ground on which devas emerge. The Zarathushtrian
reduction is not particularly different from the Puranic.
In
this essay, I summarize the general structural and nomenclatural similarities
between the Zoroastrian and the Vedic systems. I hope to show that the
Zoroastrian innovations on the prior Vedic system in Iran have parallels in the
adaptations that were taking place in India in the Puranic period. But
Zarathushtras emphasis on a sharp dichotomy between good and evil gave rise to
an aesthetic and an approach that was quite unique.
The General System
Here
is a list of divinities that are included by the Zoroastrians amongst the
forces of the good where I provide the corresponding Sanskrit spelling within
brackets:
The Great Lord
The
supreme God of the Zoroastrian faith is Ahura Mazda (Asura Medha). He is
self-created, omniscient, omnipresent, holy, invisible, and beyond human
conceptualization. In Yast 1, Ahura Mazda proclaims:
My
sixth name is understanding; my seventh is Intelligent One; my eighth name is
Knowledge; my ninth is Endowed with Knowledge; my twentieth is Mazda (Wisdom). I am the Wise One; my name is the Wisest of the Wise.
This
is reminiscent of Purusa in the Vedas. The Cosmic Purus a projects on the three
planes of the heavens, the sun, and the earth into the Visve Devah, Indra, and Agni.
Likewise,
Ahura Mazda projects his power of good through the Amesha Spenta (Immortal
Energy).
Vohu
Manah (Vasu Manah, or Sumanas): Good Intention; Persian Bahman
Asha
Vahishta (Rta Vasistha): Best Law; Ardvahisht
Kshathra
Vairya (Ksatra Vairya): Heroic Dominion
Spenta
Armaiti (Spanda Aramati): Bounteous Devotion
Haurvatat
(Sarvatva): Wholeness
Amaratat
(Amaratva): Immortality
The
first three are conceived of as masculine beings, the last three as feminine.
The division of the six Amesha Spentas in three classes, with masculine and
feminine forms, appears to parallel the projection of the power of Purusa into
divinities in the three planes of Mind, Law, and Kingship.
Common deities (Yazatas)
Many
deities are identical in the Zoroastrian and the Vedic systems. Some can be
recognized by noting the peculiar sound transformation in going from Sanskrit
to Avestan such as asa obtained from rta.
The
Vedic deities are conceived within the frame work of the bandhu between the astronomical, the terrestrial, and the
physiological and the spiritual. There seems to be a similar conception behind
the Adorable Gods (Yajatas) since
they include several stars such as the Pleiades, Sirius, and Vega.
Airyaman
(Aryaman): An Aditya who appears together with Mitra. In Yast 3, there is
invocation to Airyama isyo, the Desirable Airyaman. Aryaman repre sents
hospitality.
Apas
(Apah.): Cosmic Waters; Aban
Apam
Napat: Child of the Waters. The pre-Zoroastrian Varuna is still invoked in the
yasna service as Apam Napat.
Aradvi
Sura Anahita (Sarasvati Sura): also Harahvati and the goddess Anahita. Arstat
(Rta): Justice, Order
Asi,
Maza-ray (Maha-ray): Fortune, treasure-laden (Yast 17)
Asman
(Asman): Stony vault, Sky; seen in opposition to Zam, Earth.
Atar
(Atharvan): Agni
Atharvan
(Atharvan)
Cista
(Sis .t .a): Goddess of the Way, Mithras companion (16th Yast)
Daena:
Religion, in later Persian Den, Woman who can possess you. The word daena
survives in Kashmiri and Punjabi.
Dadar
(Data): Giver
Gav
(Gauh.): Cosmic Cow, Earth Vedic Religion in Ancient Iran
Hvar
(Svar): Sun; in later Persian the prefix Khor as in Khordad (given by Sun) Iza
(Id .a/Il .a): Goddess of Sacrifice
Mithra
(Mitra), also Mihr. Seen in Raman Khrastra, Ramas Ks .atra , Ramarajya, in the
Ram Yast. Good Vay (Vayu) is called Ram (signifying joy and peace). Sraosa (Brhas-pati):
Companion of Mithra. In later Persia, as Saros or Siroos, he is the angel who
mediates between God and man.
Thworesta
(Tvastr): Fashioner
Ushah
(Usa): The Goddess Dawn that makes self-illumination possible.
Vad
(Vata): Wind
Vayu,
Vay (Vayu): Breath
Verethraghan
(Vrtrahan): Indra as destroyer of the veil of ignorance (Vrtra) as in the Vedas
= Persian Bahram
Vivanhvant
(Visasvant): Sun
Yima
(Yama); as in Jam or Jamshed (Yima Khsaeta, Yima Radiant) deserted by Khvarnah
(Suvarnah), Sun.
Mitra
and Bhaga are two of the Adityas, names of the Sun, in the Vedas. The other
Adityas from a late list are Indra, Aryaman, Vivasvant, Visnu, Parjanya, Varuna,
Dhatr, Pusan, Amsu, and Tvasta.
Since
Mitra and Varun are dvandva partners
in the Vedas, the omission of Varuna from the Zoroastrian lists indicates that
Zarathushtra was from the borderlands of the Vedic world where the Vedic system
was not fully in place. This would also explain the omission of divinities such
as Visnu and Rudra. Likewise, it explains why the names of the Pleiades (Krttika
in Sanskrit) are very different: Paoiryaen.
But since Varuna is mentioned in the Mitanni documents, it is clear that the pre-Zoroastrian religion in Iran included Varuna.
It
is remarkable that Baga (Skt. Bhaga), the pre Zoroastrian name of God in Iran,
is not listed amongst the Yazatas. This omission may be a consequence of the
adoption of a new divinity, Ahura Mazda, in place of the old one.
Common cultural concepts
The
Zoroastrian innovations did not change the basic Vedic character of the culture
in Iran. The worship ritual remained unchanged as was the case with basic
conceptions related to divinity and the place of man. In disease the
Zoroastrians speak of Aesma in place of Yaksma.
Amesa
(Amr .ta): Immortal. The emphasis is on a state beyond time from which the
phenomenal world emerges.
Arta
(Rta): Asha; Cosmic Order
Azi
(Ahi): Dragon. This is the dragon that covers truth.
Baresman
(Barhi): grass strewn on vedi
Druj
(Druh): opposite of Asha, falsehood, anrta
Framayisn
(Yajamana)
Frashasti
(Prasasti)
Hamkar
(Samskara)
Haoma
(Soma); Used in ritual
Humayi
(Su+maya): good maya
Karapan
(Krpan): Niggardliness, Zarathusthra is hostile to it
Kav,
Kay, Kavi (Kavi): Inspired seer
Mahal
(Mahalaya) Nahn (Snana): ritual bath
Pavi
(Pavitra): place to sacrifice
Saena
(Syena): the eagle; also Saena meregh (mrga), Simurgh
Sogand
(Saugandha): oath
Urvar
(urvar): the original plant or productive ground; later Persian ruvan, soul
Vah, Vah (Svaha, Svaha): Invocation at the fire ritual
Varah
(Vrata): Vow
Yasna
(Yajna); also Jashn; the act of worship; sacrifice
Yatu
(yatu): magic; jadu
Yima
son of Vivanhvant (Yama son of Vivasvant)
Yazata
(yajata); worthy of worship
Zaotar
(hota): priest
Zaothra
(Stotra): Worship
The
struggle between the Arya and the Dasyu in the Vedas is paralleled by one
between the Arya and the Turya (Turks).
Five divinities in Yasna Haptanhaiti
Asi
(As): Reward, called Maza-rayi (Maharay)
Is
(Isa): Enjoyment
Azuiti
(Ahuti): Plenty
Frasasti
(Prasasti): Satisfaction
Parandhi
(Purandhi): Nourishment
Zarathushtra
nowhere names the daevas born of Angra Mainyu (Pahlavi Ahriman, Hostile Spirit)
but Middle Iranian books label Indar (Indra), Nanhaithya (Nasatya), and Savol.
These appear to be a personification of the acquisitive aspects of the devas. Confirmation of this idea comes
from the fact that Vayu in the Zoroastrian view is said to have two aspects,
one good and another harmful (zinake).
The good Indra, as Verethraghan (Vrtrahan), the destroyer of the veil of
ignorance, is Yazata worthy of worship.
Further Parallels
The
list of common deities and concepts will make it clear that the Zoroastrian
system is essentially the same as the Vedic one. The presence of Indra in the
list of the daevas seems to mirror the relegation of Indra that started in the
Puranic times where instead of connecting to Svar through the intermediate
region of which Indra is lord, a direct worship of the Great Lord (Visnu or
Siva) was stressed. This innovation is not counter to the Vedic system since
the triple division is a recursive order. Devas are a part of the good forces in the Zoroastrian system under the label of yazata (yajatra,
the adored ones).
The
Zoroasatrian mythology remembers the Vedic sages and heroes such as Kavi
Susravah (Kay Khosrau), Kavi Usanas (Kay Us). The names Ksatra Vrya (Shahriyar)
and Suvarnah (Khwarrah, Farrah) help find the logic of late Persian names. The
daeva in modern Persian are known as deev.
The
commonality of the fire ritual is well known. Less
known is the ritual of the nine-nights (barashnom i no shab) which is like the
Indian ritual of the same name (navaratri). The Navroz occurs on the day of the spring equinox just as the festival of Indra.
Zarathushtra
made a clear distinction between the good way (ashavant) and the false way
(dregvant). The pre-Zoroastrian religion of Iran is clearly Vedic. Zarathushtras innovation lay in his emphasis on the
dichotomy of good and bad. But in details it retained the earlier structure
of the Vedic divinities and their relationship as well as the central role of
the fire ritual.
Evolution, purity
The
Pahlavi texts distinguish between the states related to the spirit and the body
as menog (Skt. manas) and getg (Skt. gat .hita). The idea of Consciousness
being primary is expressed in the theology as the creation first of menog and
then getg. In the beginning both these are perfect but later due to mixture
there is trouble. In general, evolution proceeds from the menog to the getg
state. This is similar to the evolution from sattva
to tamas.
The
Pahlavi word for confession is patt which is similar to patita, fallen. Purification is done by yozdathra, suddhi.
Herodotus
states that the Persians built no temples, no altars, made no images or statues
(Herodotus 1.131 2). Arrian in the Indica (7) says that Indians did not build
temples for the gods. To the outsider also, the two religions of the Persians
and the Indians looked similar.
Elsewhere,
I have summarized the evidence5 regarding the presence of the Indian religion
in West Asia in the second millennium BC. This spread appears with the Kassites
in 1750 BC in Mesopotamia who worshiped Surya and later for centuries in the
empire of the Vedic worshiping Mitanni. These ruling groups represented a
minority in a population that spoke different languages. Other Vedic religion
worshiping groups were undoubtedly in the intermediate region of Iran which
itself consisted of several ethnic groups including the Elamite and the Turkic.
Zarathushtra brought a new element into the picture from the northeast. Linguistically, he happened to be ‘h’ speaking in opposition to the Indic ‘s’ speaking as in haptah versus saptah for week, or hvar versus svar for the Sun. He also brought
the categorization of good versus evil onto the framework to create a new
structure which was to beinuential in the shaping of the Judeo-Christian
tradition.
The
old Vedic religion survived for a pretty long time in corners of Iran. The
evidence of the survival of the devas comes from the daiva-inscription of Khshayarshan (Xerxes) (ruled 486-465 BC) in
which the revolt by the daiva
worshipers in West Iran is directly mentioned.
Scholars
generally take the use of daiva in the inscription as a misprint for daeva.
Whether that is true or not, the inscription does point to the presence of
diverse be beliefs within the region during the middle of the first millennium
BC. Furthermore, the presence of the Mitanni does support the notion of the daiva worshipers to the West of the
Iranians.
Concluding Remarks
The
extensive spread of the Vedic religion in Iran prior to Zarathushtra explains
how the Zoroastrian reform left the basic system unchanged. The similarities in
the ritual offering made by the Zoroastrians and the Hindus are well known.
These offerings include the milk, water, the sap of plants, cakes of rice or
wheat, fruit and vegetables, butter.
The
spread of the Vedic system also explains how the Mitannis 6, as an Indic-name using ruling minority, remained connected to
their Vedic traditions. They were neighbours to the pre-Zoroastrian Vedic Iran
and thus they should not be seen as an isolated group.
The
chronological framework presented by the parallels between the Zoroastrian and
the Vedic systems is in consonance with the idea that the Vedic people have
been in India since at least 5000 BC, as confirmed by the astronomical
references in the Vedic texts and the absence of archaeological evidence
regarding influx of people into India after that time. 7 The Puranas speak of the Vedic people in Jambudvpa and beyond the Himalayas in the north in Uttara-Kuru. It appears that subsequent to the collapse of the Sarasvati-river based economy around 1900 BC, groups of Indians moved West and that might have been responsible for the Aryanization of Iran if it wasn’t Aryanized earlier. This movement seems to be correlated with the presence of the Indic Kassites and the Mitannis in West Asia.8
In
such a scenario, the Uttara-Kuru tribes, who were a part of the larger Vedic
world, may have pushed West wards in a process that must have continued for
millennia and taken myths from the Indic region to Europe. This was not a
process of invasions but rather a complex process with some migration and some
cultural diffusion. One should note that about 10,000 years ago most of
northern Europe was under ice in the last Ice Age and the inhabitants of
ice-free southern Europe were speakers of non-Indo-European languages such as
the Basque, Etruscan and Finnish of later times. To the extent the Uttara-Kuru
tribes moved West, they must have inter married with local populations to
emerge as different European tribes.
The
divergence in the names of the stars, which were central to the Vedic ritual,
suggests that there existed variation in the traditions, rerlecting local
custom and influence of other cultures.
If
the date of Zarathushtra being 258 years before Alexander is correct, then the
syntheses of Zarathushtra and the Buddha, one extolling wisdom (medha) and the
other intelligence (buddhi), occurred at almost the same period. The use of
temples is late in the Zoroastrian and the Hindu traditions and it may have
been a response to the popularity of the Buddha image and the sangha that
administered it.
Unfortunately,
Avestan and later Zoroastrian studies have not made use of fieldwork of social
customs in Kashmir and Punjab. It is my hope that research done on parallels in
India and also on the Vedic religion prior to the coming of Zarathushtra will
be most useful. The understanding of the Zoroastrian religion would benefit
from a systematic comparison with the Vedic texts and by considering the
Sanskrit etymologies of the Avestan words.
Notes
1.
Boyce, 1975, 2001. In the Gathas, Zarathushtra uses the imagery of the cow
repeatedly, without reference to the plough or tilling of the soil. This has
been taken to imply a pastoral life-style. This inference by Boyce and other
scholars before her is in error since the usual meaning of the term gauh in the
Vedas and the Avesta is Earth. In fact, farming was introduced in Central Asia
as early as the 5th millennium BC and the idea of pastoralism in Zarathushtras
age on this argument is wrong.
2.
Ernst Herzfeld in his Zoroaster and His
World has argued for the later date in contrast to the earlier date by Mary
Boyce in her History of Zoroastrianism. In my judgment, Herzfelds arguments are
stronger.
3.
See Kak, 2000, for the astronomical bandhu that illuminate the origin of
divinities.
4.
It should be noted that the names in themselves are not as significant as the
structure of the system.
5.
Kak, Akhenaten, Surya, and the R .gveda, 2003.
6.
Kak, op cit.
7.
See Kak, 2000 and Kazanas, 1999, 2001, 2002 for astronomical and other reasons
for the presence of the Vedic people in India at an early date.
8. The idea of a proto-Indoaryan Iran which led to the later Indic (Burrow, 1973) does not square with the facts related to Middle Indic names amongst the Mitanni and the Nuzi (Dumont, 1947). Likewise, it doesn’t explain the presence of yahvah in the Rgveda (Kak, 2003),
or the distribution of the Rgvedic deities in several parts of the world
(Kazanas, 2001).
References
1.
M. Boyce, 1975. A History of Zoroastrianism. E.J. Brill, Leiden.
2.
M. Boyce, 2001. Zoroastrians. Routledge, London. Vedic Religion in Ancient Iran
63
3.
T. Burrow, 1973. The proto-Indoaryans. J. of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2:
123-140.
4.
P.-E. Dumont, 1947. Indo-Aryan names from Mitanni, Nuzi, and Syrian documents.
Journal of American Oriental Society, 67: 251-253.
5.
E. Herzfeld, 1947. Zoroaster and his World. Princeton University Press,
Princeton.
6.
S. Kak, 2000. The Astronomical Code of the R .gveda. Munshiram Manoharlal, New
Delhi.
7.
S. Kak, 2003. Akhenaten, Surya, and the R .gveda. LSU, Baton Rouge.
8.
N. Kazanas, 1999. The Rgveda and Indo-Europeans. Annals of the Bhandarkar
Oriental Research Insti tute, 80: 15-42.
9.
N. Kazanas, 2001. Indo-European deities and the Rgveda. Journal of
Indo-European Studies, 29: 257-293.
10.
N. Kazanas, 2002. Indigenous Indo-Aryans and the Rgveda. Journal of
Indo-European Studies, 30: 69 128.
@Subhash Kak The Adyar Library Bulletin, vol. 67, pp. 47-63, 2003. Also read Here
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