Around 3,200 years ago, priests and poet-scholars in the northwestern reaches of the Indian subcontinent did something extraordinary: they fixed in oral memory a vast body of sacred hymns that had already been accumulating for centuries. The result was the Rigveda — a collection of 1,028 hymns in roughly 10,600 verses, composed in Vedic Sanskrit, and still recited at Hindu weddings and religious ceremonies today.
What the evidence shows
- Rigveda hymns: The collection contains 10 books (maṇḍalas), with the eight oldest books focused on cosmology, praise of the gods, and ritual — the two later books expanding into philosophy, ethics, and questions about the origin of the universe.
- Oral transmission: No written records survive from this period, but scholars are broadly confident the texts were preserved intact through memorization systems of exceptional precision — phonetic accuracy was itself considered sacred.
- Vedic Sanskrit: The language of the Rigveda is the oldest attested form of any Indo-European language still connected to a living tradition, with linguistic similarities to early Iranian Avestan and even to Homeric Greek.
A text assembled from many voices
The Rigveda was never the work of a single author or moment. Scholars believe its composition stretched from roughly 1500 C.E. to 1000 B.C.E., with codification — the fixing of the text in its received form — occurring toward the end of that period, around 1200–1000 B.C.E., in the early Kuru kingdom of what is now northern India and Haryana.
The hymns were composed by different priestly families, known as gotras, and the “family books” at the core of the collection preserve those distinct lineages. But the Rigveda’s vocabulary tells an even wider story. Of the text’s thousands of words, roughly 300 are neither Indo-Aryan nor Indo-European in origin. Scholars have traced many of these to Munda and proto-Munda languages spoken in eastern India, others to Dravidian roots from the south, and a few to a possibly lost Central Asian language. Sanskrit scholar Frits Staal and linguist Michael Witzel both conclude from this that the people who composed the Rigveda were already living alongside — and exchanging language with — Munda and Dravidian-speaking communities.
This wasn’t a text born in isolation. It was assembled at a crossroads.
What the hymns reveal about Vedic society
The Rigveda is not a legal code or a historical chronicle, but it offers oblique glimpses into the world that produced it. The society it reflects was semi-nomadic and pastoral, with evidence of emerging agriculture — plows are mentioned, and agricultural divinities are celebrated. Iron does not appear, which has helped scholars date the text’s composition to before 1000 B.C.E. Metalworking, including gold-cloaked metal, does appear.
Women in the Rigveda appear with surprising frequency as speakers in dialogue hymns — not only as mythological or divine figures, but as named human poets. Scholars Stephanie Jamison and Joel Brereton, whose 2014 translation is now considered a landmark in the field, note that the women of the Rigveda are “quite outspoken and appear more sexually confident than men.” Names like Lopāmudrā, Ghoṣā, Viśvavārā, and Apāla Ātreyī are preserved as authors of specific hymns. These were not anonymous contributors.
There is also little evidence of a formalized caste hierarchy in the Rigveda. Jamison and Brereton state that any social stratification seems “embryonic” — more aspirational ideal than enforced social reality.
Connections across the ancient world
One of the most remarkable features of the Rigveda is how many of its gods appear, under related names, in other ancient traditions. Vedic deities including Varuna, Mitra, and Indra appear in Mitanni documents from northern Syria and Iraq dating to roughly 1450–1350 B.C.E. — independently confirming the deep antiquity of these traditions and their shared Proto-Indo-Iranian roots.
The hymns also show strong structural parallels with the Gathas of the Avesta — the oldest surviving Iranian sacred texts — and with Homer’s Iliad. These are not borrowings in either direction. They are family resemblances from a common ancestor: the lost Proto-Indo-European oral tradition that preceded them all.
The Rigveda, in other words, is not just a Hindu text. It is a window into a shared human inheritance that eventually branched into the religious and literary traditions of Iran, Greece, and much of Europe.
Lasting impact
The Rigveda became the foundation on which all four Vedas rested — and from which the later Upanishads, the Mahabharata, the Ramayana, and the full philosophical tradition of Hindu thought eventually grew. Its linguistic structure was essential to scholars’ reconstruction of Proto-Indo-European, the hypothetical common ancestor of a language family now spoken by roughly half the world’s population.
Some of its verses are still recited at Hindu weddings today — meaning this text has been in continuous spoken use for at least 3,000 years. That is an almost incomprehensible span of cultural continuity.
The precision of its oral transmission also became a model. The memorization techniques developed to preserve the Rigveda — including elaborate cross-checking methods that encoded the text redundantly in multiple recitation patterns — represent one of the most sophisticated information-preservation systems ever devised by human beings, predating writing by centuries in this tradition. UNESCO recognized Vedic chanting as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2003 C.E.
Blindspots and limits
Dating the Rigveda remains genuinely contested. Jamison and Brereton themselves wrote in 2014 C.E. that the question “has been and is likely to remain a matter of contention and reconsideration.” The ~1200 B.C.E. codification date used here reflects Michael Witzel’s estimate for the end of the Rigvedic period; Asko Parpora places codification closer to 1000 B.C.E. The text itself offers no dates, and no contemporary written records survive.
The tradition as we have it also comes through a single surviving branch — the Śakalya Shakha. Many other shakhas are lost. What those lost branches contained, and how they might have differed, we cannot know.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Rigveda
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous communities secure 160 million hectares of land rights at COP30
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on ancient history
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