Dhanurveda Samhita
Dhanurveda Samhita
ShastraMartial Science2 Adhyayas · 263 Verses

Dhanurveda Samhita

धनुर्वेद संहिता

The Science of Archery and Warfare

The ancient Indian treatise on martial science — weapon classifications, battle formations, warrior ethics, and the spiritual discipline of Dhanurveda.

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About This Book

The Dhanurveda Samhita is an ancient Indian text dedicated to the science of archery (Dhanurveda) and warfare. Attributed to the tradition of martial knowledge passed down through the Rishis, it covers weapon classifications (Astra and Shastra), battle formations (Vyuha), warrior ethics, archery techniques, and the spiritual dimensions of martial training. As an Upavedic text associated with the Yajurveda, the Dhanurveda occupies a unique place in Indian knowledge systems, bridging the practical arts of war with the philosophical ideals of Dharma.

How This Book Is Organised

The Dhanurveda Samhita is structured into Adhyayas (chapters), each covering aspects of martial science.

Adhyayas

Chapters covering martial topics

Shlokas

Verses read one by one

Available Reading Features

This edition of Dhanurveda Samhita on Vedapath includes:

Sanskrit

Original Sanskrit verses (Devanagari)

Transliteration

Transliteration for guided reading

Meanings

Word-by-word meanings

Translations

Clear, faithful translations

Enrichment

Weapon analysis, tactical significance, and martial philosophy

Adhyayas of Dhanurveda Samhita

The Dhanurveda Samhita is divided into Adhyayas.
Each Adhyaya explores a distinct area of martial science and warrior training.

Chapter 1: Dhanurveda Samhita Chapter 1: Initiation, Bows and Astras

Foundations of Martial Science

Chapter 1 of Vasistha’s Dhanurveda Samhita opens as Lord Mahadeva instructs the wise Bhargava on the science of warfare, presenting Dhanurveda as a disciplined, sacred, and practical body of knowledge. The chapter defines the four foundational “feet” or divisions of the science: initiation, collection or acquisition of materials, perfected applications, and methods of use. It also introduces classifications of weapons, the ethical purpose of arms, and the obligation of martial knowledge to protect the virtuous, restrain thieves and evildoers, and safeguard the people. A major portion of the chapter concerns the qualifications of teacher and student. The teacher must test the disciple and avoid instructing the greedy, ungrateful, dull, or deceitful. Weapons are assigned according to social function, and instruction begins only on auspicious lunar days, constellations, and weekdays, accompanied by fasting, ritual purity, offerings, mantras, and reverence to deities, guru, bow, and arrows. The chapter thus frames archery not merely as a technique but as a sacred initiation requiring moral restraint and spiritual preparation. The text then moves into detailed technical instruction. It discusses bow measurements, distinguishing divine and human bows, and warns against defective bows that are too old, immature, burnt, cracked, knotted, or improperly handled. Bowstring materials are described, including cloth thread, sinew, animal fiber, bark, and other substances, with emphasis on firmness, purity, and seasonal collection. Arrows are similarly examined: their shafts, feathers, wings, lengths, seasonal preparation, and various arrowheads such as razor-shaped, crescent-shaped, needle-pointed, cow-tail, bhalla, and crow-beak forms. The middle sections treat archery posture, grip, and release. Stances such as alidha, vishakha, dardura, garuda, and padmasana are outlined, along with specialized fist-grips including pataka, vajramushti, simhakarna, matsari, and kakatundi. The chapter emphasizes practice under the guru, breath control, mental focus, quick nocking, fatigue-conquest, and the ability to strike fixed, moving, distant, subtle, rotating, and sound-based targets. The closing verses expand from physical archery to sacred and mythic astras. Annual autumn practice, Navami worship of Candi/Durga, offerings to teachers, scriptures, horses, and weapons are prescribed. Finally, divine weapons such as Brahmastra, Brahmadanda, Brahmashiras, Pashupata, Vayavya, Agneya, and Narasimha are named, showing Dhanurveda as a synthesis of martial science, ritual authority, yogic concentration, and divine weapon lore.

Astra VidyaArcheryFoundations

Chapter 2: Dhanurveda Samhita Chapter 2: Vayavyaka Astra, Wind & Omens in War

Advanced Martial Techniques

Chapter 2 of Vasistha’s Dhanurveda Samhita, in this aggregated recension, turns from ordinary martial training to the subtler science of astras, omens, directional strategy, and ritual timing. Its opening repeatedly invokes samhara, destruction or withdrawal, and connects it with the Vayavyaka astra, the wind-weapon. The repetition suggests a mnemonic or liturgical emphasis: the warrior must not merely exert force, but contemplate the weapon’s destructive and restraining nature. The chapter then links victory to the movement of wind, advising combat in the direction in which the wind blows and promising success even against Indra or Purandara. This is both practical, since wind affects arrows, dust, sound, visibility, and troop morale, and symbolic, since vāyu is life-force, motion, and divine momentum. Verses on nāḍī and prāṇa connect the outer wind with the warrior’s inner breath, so drawing the bowstring to the ear becomes an alignment of body, breath, weapon, and cosmic current. Another section describes producing battle-sound through bodily technique using thumb, forefinger, and foot, presenting sound, rhythm, and psychological force as weapons in themselves. The chapter also gives solar and lunar orientations, lists tithis such as Pañcamī, Trayodaśī, Aṣṭamī, Saptamī, Pūrṇimā, and Caturthī, and mentions directional or yoginī associations such as Nairṛtī and Aiśānī. These passages show warfare embedded in calendrical, astrological, and ritual frameworks. The closing verses, attributed to Rudra, declare that an army which has gained proper strength and follows these prescriptions may quickly overcome its enemies.

Yuddha KaushalyaFormationsMastery

Frequently Asked Questions

Chapter 1 introduces Dhanurveda as a sacred martial science. It covers initiation, qualifications of teacher and student, weapon types, bow and arrow construction, archery stances, target practice, ritual observances, and divine astras.

The chapter states that the purpose of Dhanurveda is the protection of virtuous people, the restraint of thieves and evildoers, and the safeguarding of subjects. Martial knowledge is presented as a dharmic duty, not as aggression for its own sake.

The chapter describes bow length, bow defects, string materials, arrow shafts, feathering, arrowhead forms, hand grips, body stances, methods of drawing and releasing, breath control, quick shooting, and target categories such as fixed, moving, rotating, distant, and sound-based targets.

Ritual is central. Instruction begins on auspicious dates after fasting, offerings, mantras, and worship. The disciple honors the guru, deities, bow, and arrows. Annual autumn practice and Navami worship of Candi/Durga, weapons, scriptures, and horses are also prescribed.

The chapter names several astras, including Brahmastra, Brahmadanda, Brahmashiras, Pashupata, Vayavya, Agneya, and Narasimha. These represent the sacred and mythic dimension of Dhanurveda, linking martial practice with divine power and mantra tradition.

Chapter 2 focuses on the Vayavyaka astra, the martial use of wind-direction, breath and bodily alignment, battle-sound, solar-lunar orientation, auspicious lunar dates, and the ritual conditions for victory.

The Vayavyaka astra is presented as a wind-associated weapon or missile-power. In this chapter it is linked with samhara, or destructive withdrawal, and is treated as a force capable of restraining even divine opposition.

The instruction to fight in the direction of the wind has practical and symbolic value. Wind can influence arrows, dust, visibility, sound, and troop advantage, while vāyu also represents life-force, movement, and cosmic support.

The chapter associates external wind with internal life-breath. By aligning prāṇa, bodily channels, and the act of drawing the bowstring to the ear, the warrior harmonizes physical technique with subtle energy.

The listed tithis and directional powers indicate that warfare was not viewed as merely physical. Auspicious timing, solar and lunar orientation, and yoginī or directional associations were considered part of strategic preparation.

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