Smṛti

Smṛti literature preserves the vast post-Vedic tradition of Hindu sacred, legal, ritual, scientific, philosophical, social, artistic, and devotional knowledge systems. The tradition includes Dharmaśāstra, ritual manuals, Vedāṅga sciences, statecraft, aesthetics, worship traditions, Kāmaśāstra, and many other civilizational knowledge systems transmitted through structured Sanskrit textual traditions.

Highlights

The Smṛti section preserves the broader civilizational knowledge systems of classical Hindu tradition beyond the Vedas themselves. These texts shaped:

  • law
  • ethics
  • ritual
  • education
  • astronomy
  • grammar
  • statecraft
  • architecture
  • devotion
  • aesthetics
  • social order
  • philosophy
  • sacred practice

across many centuries of Indian intellectual history.

This project intentionally follows a compact, canonical, and navigation-friendly structure rather than attempting to function as an uncontrolled archival dump of every Sanskrit text ever composed.

Only foundational, independently transmitted, and historically influential texts with stable internal structure are treated as standalone canonical books. Translations, Bhāṣyas, Ṭīkās, annotations, and interpretive layers are attached directly to canonical verse or sūtra identifiers rather than treated as separate books.

What is Smṛti?

In Hindu tradition, sacred literature is often broadly divided into:

  • Śruti
  • and Smṛti

Śruti refers primarily to:

  • the Vedas
  • Upanishads
  • revealed sacred tradition

Smṛti literally means:

  • remembrance
  • remembered tradition
  • transmitted tradition

Smṛti literature includes the vast body of:

  • legal texts
  • ritual manuals
  • epics
  • social codes
  • sciences
  • devotional systems
  • philosophical manuals
  • artistic traditions
  • applied knowledge systems

that developed around and after the Vedic tradition.

These texts helped organize practical civilization-level knowledge for:

  • society
  • governance
  • education
  • ritual
  • ethics
  • devotion
  • arts
  • daily life

Why is Smṛti Important?

Smṛti literature shaped much of classical Indian civilization.

These traditions influenced:

  • Hindu law
  • social customs
  • temple systems
  • education
  • astronomy
  • linguistics
  • medicine
  • governance
  • aesthetics
  • devotional culture
  • ritual practice

Many systems still visible in Indian civilization today evolved through:

  • Smṛti traditions
  • Dharma literature
  • ritual systems
  • devotional manuals
  • scholastic sciences

Smṛti texts therefore preserve not only religion but also:

  • cultural memory
  • intellectual history
  • civilizational organization
  • practical knowledge systems

How is This Section Organized?

The Smṛti section is intentionally organized as a:

  • compact
  • canonical
  • navigation-friendly
  • structurally stable

knowledge architecture.

The classifications broadly follow traditional Indian systems such as:

  • Dharmaśāstra
  • Kalpa
  • Vedāṅga
  • Upaveda
  • Nīti traditions
  • Kāmaśāstra
  • Āgama traditions
  • Bhakti traditions

However, the hierarchy has also been simplified for:

  • modern web navigation
  • stable URL architecture
  • scalable commentary integration
  • clean digital structure

The goal is not to create an infinitely expanding archival catalog but a carefully curated canonical framework.

What Types of Texts are Included?

The Smṛti section includes foundational texts connected with:

  • dharma and law
  • ritual systems
  • worship traditions
  • Vedāṅga sciences
  • classical sciences
  • polity and statecraft
  • aesthetics and arts
  • devotion
  • temple traditions
  • social conduct
  • applied philosophy

Examples include traditions related to:

  • Dharmaśāstra
  • Gṛhya and Kalpa systems
  • Jyotiṣa
  • Vyākaraṇa
  • Artha and Nīti literature
  • Kāmaśāstra
  • temple ritual traditions
  • devotional manuals

Only texts with:

  • stable structure
  • identifiable chapter systems
  • verse organization
  • sūtra architecture
  • historically independent transmission

are treated as standalone canonical books.

Why are Many Texts Excluded?

This project intentionally does not include:

  • every manuscript
  • every regional recension
  • repetitive ritual digests
  • overlapping scholastic compilations
  • derivative manuals
  • minor sectarian summaries
  • commentary duplicates

Many later Sanskrit traditions produced:

  • condensed manuals
  • repetitive compilations
  • derivative summaries
  • localized ritual adaptations

Including all of them as standalone books would create:

  • excessive navigation depth
  • duplicate commentary chains
  • unstable taxonomy
  • poor usability
  • maintenance complexity

The project therefore prioritizes:

  • canonical stability
  • historical influence
  • structural clarity
  • long-term scalability

over uncontrolled textual expansion.

Why are Commentaries Not Separate Books?

Traditional Sanskrit learning developed through layered commentary systems.

A single foundational text often generated:

  • Bhāṣyas
  • Ṭīkās
  • Vṛttis
  • glosses
  • scholastic annotations
  • comparative interpretations

Instead of treating every commentary as a separate standalone book, this project attaches commentary traditions directly to:

  • canonical verse identifiers
  • sūtra identifiers
  • chapter structures

This creates:

  • cleaner navigation
  • stable citation systems
  • scalable annotation architecture
  • comparative reading support
  • better long-term maintainability

The canonical root text acts as the structural anchor.

What are the Main Subsections?

The Smṛti section is broadly organized into major knowledge systems such as:

  • Dharma
  • Ritual
  • Worship
  • Vedāṅga Sciences
  • Classical Sciences
  • Statecraft and Nīti
  • Kāma
  • Aesthetics

These sections collectively preserve:

  • social philosophy
  • ritual systems
  • scientific traditions
  • governance theory
  • sacred arts
  • devotional practices
  • applied cultural knowledge

within the broader Sanskrit intellectual world.

Relationship Between Smṛti and Śruti

Smṛti traditions generally operate in relationship with:

  • Vedic authority
  • sacred tradition
  • inherited interpretation

Many Smṛti texts explain:

  • how rituals should be performed
  • how society should function
  • how sacred language should be interpreted
  • how knowledge should be organized
  • how spiritual and social duties should be practiced

In many Hindu traditions:

  • Śruti provides foundational revelation
  • Smṛti provides applied interpretation and lived structure

The two therefore remained deeply interconnected historically.

Why is Structure Important in This Project?

This project is designed around:

  • verse-centric architecture
  • stable identifiers
  • canonical structure
  • long-term scalability

Every canonical text ideally possesses:

  • stable chapters
  • identifiable verses
  • sūtras
  • structural navigation points

This allows:

  • layered commentary systems
  • translation comparison
  • annotation support
  • scholarly citation
  • multilingual expansion
  • long-term digital preservation

The structure is therefore intentionally designed not only for reading but also for:

  • future commentary integration
  • research navigation
  • comparative study
  • scalable digital humanities workflows

Editorial Philosophy of This Section

This section approaches Smṛti literature as:

  • a civilizational knowledge archive
  • a structured Sanskrit intellectual ecosystem
  • a practical philosophy tradition
  • a ritual and social framework
  • a scientific and artistic heritage system

The editorial philosophy attempts to balance:

  • traditional Sanskrit taxonomy
  • scholarly defensibility
  • practical usability
  • clean URL hierarchy
  • stable canonical architecture
  • commentary scalability

The goal is to preserve classical Hindu knowledge systems in a form that remains:

  • readable for modern audiences
  • structurally rigorous
  • historically responsible
  • digitally sustainable

Simple Summary (For Easy Understanding)

Smṛti literature preserves the practical knowledge systems of classical Hindu civilization including law, ritual, worship, sciences, governance, arts, ethics, and social philosophy.

This project organizes Smṛti texts into a clean and carefully structured digital library using canonical root texts as stable foundations for translations, commentary, and comparative study.

In simple terms, the Smṛti section preserves how Hindu civilization organized knowledge, society, ritual, learning, governance, devotion, and daily life across many centuries of Sanskrit intellectual history.


Dharma

The Dharma section preserves the classical Hindu traditions of Dharmaśāstra, ethical duty, social law, conduct, jurisprudence, ritual obligation, kingship, inheritance, penance, and sacred social philosophy. These texts shaped many dimensions of traditional Hindu legal, ethical, and social thought across centuries of Indian civilization.

Ritual

The Ritual section preserves the classical Hindu traditions of Kalpa, sacrificial systems, domestic rites, life-cycle rituals, ceremonial procedure, sacred observances, and Vedic ritual organization. These traditions shaped religious practice, household rites, priestly systems, and ceremonial culture across many centuries of Indian civilization.

Worship

The Worship section preserves the classical Hindu traditions of Āgama, Tantra, temple ritual, devotional practice, sacred imagery, mantra, pilgrimage, consecration, and liturgical worship systems. These traditions shaped temple culture, devotional life, sacred architecture, ritual practice, and spiritual discipline across many centuries of Indian civilization.

Vedanga Sciences

The Vedanga Sciences section preserves the classical auxiliary knowledge systems developed for understanding, preserving, reciting, interpreting, and applying the Vedas. These traditions include phonetics, ritual procedure, grammar, etymology, prosody, and astronomy, forming the intellectual foundation of Sanskrit scholastic civilization.

Classical Sciences

The Classical Sciences section preserves the major scientific, technical, medical, mathematical, architectural, linguistic, and applied knowledge traditions of classical Indian civilization. These traditions include Ayurveda, astronomy, mathematics, architecture, musicology, poetics, linguistics, and other systematic knowledge systems preserved through Sanskrit scholastic literature.

Statecraft and Niti

The Statecraft and Niti section preserves the classical Hindu traditions of governance, political philosophy, diplomacy, administration, economics, ethics, warfare, public policy, leadership, and practical wisdom. These traditions shaped royal administration, legal systems, social order, and political thought across many centuries of Indian civilization.

Kama

The Kama section preserves the classical Hindu traditions of Kāmaśāstra, human relationships, aesthetics of love, household life, emotional culture, social interaction, refinement, companionship, and the philosophy of pleasure within the broader framework of classical Indian civilization and ethical life.

Aesthetics

The Aesthetics section preserves the classical Hindu traditions of drama, poetry, music, dance, rasa theory, literary criticism, artistic expression, performance, and aesthetic philosophy. These traditions shaped Indian literature, theater, devotional expression, music, and artistic culture across many centuries of Sanskrit civilization.