READING HALLTHIRD MILLENNIUM LIBRARY |
THE HISTORY OF ANCIENT INDIA
CHAPTER XII
THE
GROWTH OF LAW AND LEGAL INSTITUTIONS
THE law-books, Dharma Shastras,
and especially trained experts in law, Dharma-pathakas,
are recognized in the didactic parts of the epic; and codes of law are assigned
to various ancient worthies, among whom Manu generally, but not always, holds
the chief place. The difference between the formal law-book, Shastra, and the
Sutra, also concerned with Dharma, is due mainly to the gradual exclusion of
irrelevant matter in the law-book. Whereas in the Sutra the term Dharma
embraces all domestic duties, religious and ethical, with slight attention paid
to formal law, in the completed Shastra law itself is the sole subject
discussed. But this difference marks only the extremes, the primitive Dharma
Sutra and the law-book of the fifth century AD. Between the two comes a number
of works bearing the title of law-book but still retaining in large measure the
characteristics of the Sutra. Likewise the formal distinction between a prose
Sutra and a metrical law-book is bridged by a period when legal works were
partly prose and partly verse. In the end, it was found more convenient to versify the rules as the Hindus versified all knowledge,
and the metre chosen for this purpose was the later
shloka, which ousted both prose and the older trishtubh metre still used in early Sutras and shastras. The name also is not absolutely fixed. The Sutra
is sometimes called shastra. Vishnu’s law-book, for
example, is both Sutra and Shastra, as well as Smriti,
a general term for traditional teaching.
As the Dharma Sutras emanated from Vedic schools, so,
though less surely, it may be said in general that the law-books at first
represented certain schools of Brahmanical teaching. The law-books of Vishnu
and of Yajnavalkya are thus exponents of Yajurveda
schools; but in the end the popular works of this class lose all connection
with any one school and become universally authoritative. There are not many of
the long list of later law-books which really deserve the name. As time went
on, a large number of works appeared, claiming as their authors sages of old,
or divine beings, but they are all without historical value and usually are
sectarian tracts inculcating special religious observances. Besides these
pseudo-law-books may be mentioned the later legal works, Dharma Nibandhas, of the eleventh century and later, and the
learned commentaries, like the Mitakshara, which have
become as authoritative as the text itself. But these later law-books do not
come into our present purview. They belong to the age of the later Puranas and
subsequent literature. The great law-books which we have to examine revert to
the beginning of the Puranic age or before it. Whatever is of value in the
later works is taken from the older, which are still authoritative.
By far the most important of these is the law-book of
Manu or the Manava Dharma Shastra, a work closely
connected with the law-book of Vishnu, which has no less than 160 verses of
Manu, and with the didactic chapters of the epic, which contain numerous verses
found in the code. Moreover, the epic recognizes Manu as a law-giver and refers
to the Dharma Shastra of Manu. The relationship between the two works is made
doubtful for the reason that we do not know when the later parts of the epic
embodying these allusions may have been composed. An analysis of all the
passages in the epic referring to Manu shows that the law-book was probably
unknown to the early epic but that it was not unknown to the later epic. This
indicates at least that the fabulous age ascribed to the law-book by the Hindus
and by early European scholars may be disregarded in favor of a much later
date. On the other hand, the present tendency is to exaggerate the lateness of
the law-book and bring it down even to the third or fourth century AD.
Professor Jolly thinks that the code and the epic belong to about the same
time, not later than the second or third century. The code in any case may not
have been identical with the work known today as Manu’s law-book, for all these
metrical works have suffered, as has the epic, from unnumbered additions.
Nevertheless, from the contents of the extant law-book
of Manu some noteworthy data may be extracted which seem to show that the work
is earlier than any other Dharma Shastra. There is not the slightest allusion to
any sectarian cult; documents are not cited in the rules on evidence;
widow-burning is not recommended; there is no recommendation of the cult of
idols (service, etc.), though idols are known as objects of veneration; the
position of the law-giver in regard to titles of law, evidence, ordeals, etc.,
is more primitive than that of any other author of a Dharma Shastra and even
than that of Vishnu in the Dharma Sutra. The law-book of Vishnu belongs to the
third century AD, and that of Yajnavalkya to the fourth
century, and the advance on Manu in order, method, and detail of legal matters
of these law-writers is very great. Hence, as in the case of the epic, it is
probable that the date now currently assumed is too late, and that the Manava Code belongs rather to the time of our era or before
it than later.
The law-book of Vishnu, which because of its Sutra
form might be thought to be earlier than Manu, is so largely interpolated that
in its present condition it must rank decidedly as secondary to that code. It
appears to have been an expansion of a Sutra belonging to the Kathaka school of the Yajurveda enlarged in the hope of
making it a general code favoring the cult of Vishnu. It mentions books under
the modern name pustaka, recognizes the burning of
widows, knows the names of the days of the week, evidently borrowing here from
Greek sources, acknowledges the Hindu Trinity, recommends the Tirthas or pilgrimages, which are decried by Manu, and in
the matter of debts and legal procedure is later than that code. At the same
time it contains much ancient material, especially in regard to legal
penalties, the rights of kings, inheritance, etc. A large part of the work is
not legal, but treats of sacrifice, impurity, sin and atonement, etc.
The codes of Yajnavalkya and Narada are probably to be referred to the fourth and
fifth centuries, respectively. The former was a learned pundit, probably of
Mithila, whose work is so closely connected with that of Manu and at the same
time is so clearly a condensation of this code, that it may be taken as certain
that the author desired to better an original rather than make a new work. Yajnavalkya pays more attention to legal matters and
improves on his model in his views regarding the rights of women, whom he
permits to inherit equally with men. He elaborates the subjects of trade and
ownership, and recognizes written documents in evidence where Manu relies on
ocular witnesses. He recommends the use of several new ordeals in testing
truth, and shows a more conservative social feeling in objecting to the union
of a Brahman priest and a slave-woman.
Of Narada, who belongs to
the fifth century and seems to have been from Nepal, it may be said that he is
the first to give us a legal code unhampered by the mass of religious and moral
teaching with which and out of which the earlier works on Dharma arose, a code
which in its fine sub-divisions of the titles of law, as well as in its
elaborate treatment otherwise of slaves, inheritance, witnesses, ordeals, etc.,
is the first in which law itself is the subject-matter. Narada’s evident posteriority to Manu and Yajnavalkya does not show that it was an independent work, rather that it was based on
these prior works. In addition to these legal lights it is necessary to mention
only Brihaspati, who, as he extols Manu as the first of law-givers, also proves
himself to be a sort of commentator rather than an original writer. His work is
in fact a brief for Manu, and proves that in his day (about 600 or 700 AD) Manu
was recognized as the original and greatest law-giver. His citations from Manu
also show that our text has not changed essentially since his day.
Civil
and Criminal Law
We have already seen that the four castes are regarded
as the frame of social life, and that the young student, after spending several
years with a priestly preceptor, the length of time depending partly on caste
and partly on aptitude, marries and becomes a householder, with numerous
religious duties to perform. Twelve years of study is regarded as the minimum,
forty-eight years as enough even for the most studious priest. Megasthenes tells us that the Hindus studied for nearly
this length of time, but it is clear that only priests practised such zeal. The epic warriors are supposed to have finished their education by
their sixteenth year, and the fact that a few words of a hymn are admitted as
substitution for this part of the education (consisting in memorizing verses)
shows that for practical purposes a smattering of Veda was deemed enough in the
case of all except the priest.
The early law-books devote no little space to the
early youth and conduct in later life of the orthodox Aryan. Manu, for example,
gives six of his twelve books to rules of life before he comes to discuss royal
life and legal matters. Noteworthy is the early date at which a man retires
from practical life. As the youth marries early, in the warrior caste as early
as sixteen, though Manu recognizes twenty-four or thirty as the usual
(priestly?) age, it may happen that he becomes a grandfather before he is
forty, by which time, to be sure, the Hindu is often grey. Now it is expressly
said that when a man becomes grey and a grandfather he is to enter the third ashrama or stage of life and become a hermit, either
accompanied with his wife or not, as he chooses. Severe asceticism marks this
period of life (it is described in full by Manu, Book 6), and probably it was
reserved generally for the priestly caste; some law-givers omit it. It is
likely that instead of this stage many priests became mendicants. The act of
renouncing the world is introduced by a sacrifice of worldly goods and other
ceremonies prescribed by the Sutras and law-books. But the latter, in
distinction from the former, if indeed they devote much time to such matters at
all, now turn to that part of Dharma or Right which is included under the head
of Royalty and Vyavahara. The latter term means law
in the modern sense, business intercourse legally interpreted, legal procedure.
There is no formal distinction between civil and criminal
law till the term vyavahara is divided by later
writers into ‘cases of property’ and `’cases of hurt’. The first enumeration of
legal titles is found in Manu and is as follows : (1) Recovery of debts; (2)
Deposits and pledges; (3) Sale without ownership; (4) Partnership; (5)
Resumption of gifts; (6) Non-payment of wages; (7) Breach of contract; (8)
Annulling of sale and purchase; (9) Disputes between the owner and tender of
cattle; (10) Disputes regarding boundaries; (11) Assault; (12) Defamation; (13)
Theft; (14) Robbery (with violence); (15) Adultery; (16) Duties of man and
wife; (17) Partition (inheritance); (18) Gambling (with dice) and betting (on
cockfights, etc.). In this category, criminal law is represented by the titles
eleven to fifteen and eighteen, while the first nine and the sixteenth and
seventeenth titles belong to civil law. There is also no distinction between
laws affecting things and persons, and, to follow the indictment of Mill in his
History of India, ‘Nonpayment of wages stands immediately before breach of
contract, as a separate title, though it ought to be included under that head’.
But the eighteen titles are remarkable as the first attempt to separate
different cases; to demand that Manu should have given us a perfect or even a
perfectly clear list is unreasonable.
The titles and the arrangement of Manu are followed by
later writers, though with sub-divisions. Thus Brihaspati, after giving the
eighteen titles says that they ‘are divided owing to diversity of lawsuits’;
and other writers give ten chief crimes (killing a woman, mixture of caste,
adultery, robbery, causing illegitimate birth, abuse, insults, assault,
procuring abortion) headed by disobedience of the king’s commands. It is, too,
only later writers who assert that a lawsuit cannot be instituted mutually between
father and son, or man and wife, or master and servant. Although the titles
begin with civil cases, there is no doubt that primitive procedure had to do
with criminal cases before civil cases were known. Thus the earliest trials are
for theft and perjury, and it is probable that theft was the first crime to be
recognized legally. We have seen that even in the Sutras the thief is brought
before the king and punished by him, and theft is the chief crime mentioned in
the Vedas (more particularly theft of cattle, or robbery). There are a thousand
forms of theft, according to Brihaspati, who makes theft one of the kinds of
‘violence’, of which there are four—homicide, theft, assault on another’s wife,
and injury (either abuse or assault). Thieves are of two sorts, open and
concealed, ‘and these are sub-divided a thousand fold, according to their
skill, ability, and mode of cheating’. Those who cheat at dice or cheat a
corporation are to be punished as impostors. The punishment for breaking into a
house to steal is impalement; highwaymen are hanged from a tree by the neck;
kidnappers are burned in a fire of straw; one who steals a cow has his nose cut
off; for stealing more than ten measures of grain the thief is executed; for
less he is fined eleven times what he has stolen. The proof of theft is
possession of the stolen property, or a track leading to the house of the
suspected man; but excessive expenditure, intercourse with sinners, and
other signs may make a man suspected; then he may have to clear himself by
oath or ordeal.
Ordeals
Manu recognizes only two ordeals. Later authors add
several more and some admit the application of an ordeal to the plaintiff as
well as to the defendant. The oath of a witness is virtually an ordeal, as the
oath invokes divine power, which punishes the guilty. The oath is taken
according to the caste of the witness. For example, a farmer swears by his
cattle, etc. Or one may simply swear that a thing is so, and if his house burns
up within a week it is a divine conviction of perjury. Later authors also
prescribe that in ordeals a writing be placed on the head of the suspected man
containing the accusation and a prayer, so that the divine power may understand
the matter. The two earliest ordeals are those of fire and water. As the Sutras
do not notice ordeals, except for a general recognition of them as ‘divine’
proofs on the part of the late Apastamba, and as the
later writers Yajnavalkya and Narada describe five ordeals, adding the ploughshare, scales, and poison, it is reasonable
to conclude that Manu stands in time, as in description, midway between the two
sets of authors and is the first to describe ordeals already known and practised. This is the judgment of Buhler and of Jolly, but
the implication that the mention of daiva in older
literature makes probable the existence of all the forms of ordeal mentioned
only in later literature is not safe. Fire and water were first used, then come
the elaborate trials with balance, etc., till eventually there are nine formal
ordeals.
The nine ordeals are as follows, arranged in the order
chosen by Brihaspati: the balance, fire, water, poison, sacred libation, grains
of rice, hot gold-piece, ploughshare, and the ordeal by Dharma and Adharma. When Professor Jolly says that no one of these can
be judged later than any other on the ground that the growth from two to five
and then to nine ordeals does not necessarily imply that one named later did
not exist before the two named first, he exaggerates the probabilities. Is it
likely, for example, that the ordeal by Dharma and Adharma is as old as that by fire and water?
The ordeal by ploughshare is especially for those
suspected of stealing cattle; the piece of heated gold is reserved for cases
involving a theft ‘over four hundred’ ; that by poison, for one worth a
thousand, etc. All such restrictions are late emendations and additions. In the
fire-test one carries a hot iron ball, and if unburned is innocent. In the
water-test, one plunges under water and to prove innocence must remain under as
long as it takes for a dart, shot at the moment of diving, to be brought back.
These two are alterations of old material, in which the accused walks through
fire, as in epic tests, or is thrown into water to see if he drown. The balance
is an easy ordeal and hence is used in the case of priests and women. It
consists in seeing whether the accused weigh less or more the second time the
test is made; if heavier, one is guilty. Probably the weight of sin weighs one
down. So in the Mahabharata, when a truth-telling man lies, his chariot begins
to sink.
Another method of exacting justice, used generally in
the case of debt, was called ‘the custom’ and consisted in what is now known as dharna. The guilty man (debtor) is besieged in his
own house by his opponent, who fasts on him till the guilty one yields or the
accuser dies. This method of punishing an injurer is
well known in the epics, where fasting to death against a person is an approved
form of retaliation. The one who has committed the offence (or owes the money)
usually yields in order to prevent the ghost of the dying creditor from
injuring him.
The punishment for murder, as already noticed, is at
first a compensation paid to the relatives or the king (perhaps both) and later
paid to the priests. The compensation is reckoned at a hundred cows (with a
bull). This is in the case of a man; in the case of a woman, the punishment is
no more than if a slave is killed. Mann treats the compensation as a penance
(paid to a priest) instead of a ‘royal right’, as in the earlier Sutra period.
The custom of appraising death at so much a head for which compensation is
exacted existed into modern times and is mentioned by Tod in his Annals of
Rajasthan.
Treason of all kinds is punishable by death, whether
it consist in attacking the king or falsifying an edict or bribing the
ministers of the king or helping his foes. Instead of other penalties, the
guilty man, especially a priest, may be outcasted,
that is, formally thrown out or banned from society, for in losing his caste he
loses all social rights; though in certain cases through established ceremonies
he may be taken back. One who is outcast loses all right to primogeniture,
inheritance, etc.
Punishments
Except for treason, all crimes are judged relatively,
that is, there is no absolute penalty, but one conditioned by the social order
of the criminal or the victim of the crime. Thus in cases of defamation, if a
warrior defame a priest, he is fined one hundred panas;
if a man of the people-caste do so, one hundred and fifty; if a slave, he shall
be corporally punished; but if a priest defame a warrior, fifty; if he defame a
man of the people, twenty-five; if he defame a slave, twelve, and this last
fine is that imposed upon equals defaming equals within the Aryan castes. But
if a slave insult a ‘regenerate’ (Aryan), his tongue is to be cut out.
Especially is this the case in relations between the sexes, for though the rule
of death for adultery is general (the woman is devoured by dogs in a public
place and the man is burned alive), yet its antique provisions are really
preserved only out of respect for tradition, the real law being that the
offending man shall be fined and the woman have her hair cut off and be treated
with contempt, unless the crime be one that outrages caste-sentiment. Thus a
slave who has intercourse with a guarded high-caste woman may be slain; a
Vaishya shall lose his property; a warrior be fined a thousand and be shaved
with urine. The old general rule of the Sutras to the effect that the woman be
eaten by dogs and the man killed is preserved under the form, explicit in the
later works but already implied by Manu, that this be the punishment if ‘a wife
who is proud of the greatness of her family’ (that is a woman of high caste)
commit adultery, while Narada restricts the ferocious
penalty to the impossible case of a priest’s wife deliberately going to a low-caste
man and seducing him.
The general lex talionis is similarly confined to thieves or robbers,
though another restriction limits it to intercourse between low and high caste
(if a man of low caste injure a man of high caste the limb corresponding to the
one hurt shall be cut off). In one particular, however, the rule of increased
fines is reversed, for in any case where a common man would be fined one penny
the king is fined a thousand, probably on the principle that he who knows more
should suffer more.
In the province of civil law the later law-books show
the greatest advance over the earlier. For example, where trade is concerned,
the Sutras know nothing of legal business partnership, apart from the united
family and its obligation as a whole to pay debts. Manu has the idea of a
partnership, but his whole discussion of the title concerns only the amount of
fees payable to priests who together perform a ceremony; and he merely raises
the question whether all the religious partners or the one who performs a
special act shall take the traditional fee for that one part. He decides that
the four chief priests out of the sixteen shall get a moiety, the next four
half of that, the next set a third share, and the next a quarter (the
commentators are not unanimous in appraising the amounts), and adds ‘by the
same principle the allotment of shares must be made among men on earth who
perform work conjointly’. In other words, except for stating that one should be
paid in accordance with the work one does, Manu has nothing to say regarding
‘partnership’, the formal fourth title of the list.
Yajnavalkya on the other hand includes agriculture and trades in
his rule. Narada, while retaining the matter
concerning priestly partnership, expresses the axiom above in this way : ‘Loss,
expense, profit of each partner are equal to, more than, or less than those of
other partners according as his share (invested) is equal, greater, or less.
Storage, food, charges, (tolls), loss, freightage, expense of keeping, must be
paid by each partner in accordance with the terms of agreement,’ etc.. Finally
Brihaspati begins his title ‘Partnership’ thus: ‘Trade or other occupations
should not be carried on by prudent men jointly with incompetent or lazy
persons or with such as are afflicted with illness, ill-fated, or destitute.
Whatever property one partner may give, authorized by many, or whatever
contract he may cause to be executed, all that is (legally) done by them all.
Whatever loss has occurred through Fate or the king shall be borne by all in
proportion to their shares. When artists practise their art jointly, they share according to their work. If a number of men in
partnership build a house or a temple, or dig a pool, or make leather articles,
the headman among the workmen gets a double share. So too among musicians: the
singers share and share alike, but he who beats time gets a half share over’.
And (still under the head of Partnership), ‘when freebooters return from a
hostile country bringing booty, they share in what they bring after giving a
sixth to the king, their captain getting four shares, the bravest getting
three, one particularly clever getting two, and the remaining associates
sharing alike’.
Interest,
Wages, Property
Regarding the use of money, an old Sutra rule
confirmed by Manu permits interest at fifteen per cent. annually, but for men
(debtors) of low caste the interest may be sixty per cent.; yet this is where
there is no security. The amount differs in any event according to caste, as
already explained. No stipulation beyond five per cent. per mensem is legal. Debts unpaid shall be worked out by labor by men of low caste. These
rules obtain from the Sutra age and vary scarcely at all. Megasthenes erroneously reports that the Indians do not take interest. Possibly he has in
mind the provision that no Brahman shall be a usurer. Wages are often paid in
kind; one fifth of the crop or of the increase in flocks goes to the man who
cares for the work. The tender of cattle, in contrast to the epic rule, gets
the milk of one cow out of ten. If a man work without food or clothing given to
him he may take a third of the produce; otherwise a fifth. But Narada gives a general rule to the effect that the servant
of a trader, a herdsman, and an agricultural servant shall respectively take a
tenth part of the profit, whether from the sale of merchandise, the increase of
flocks, or the grain-crop. This is also the provision of Yajnavalkya.
The agricultural servant is a Shudra slave or a member of a mixed caste.
The family represented in the law-books as the usual
family is one where all the brothers live together as heirs of the father, who
may or may not, as he or they prefer, divide his property during his life-time.
The eldest son has certain rights of primogeniture, but, as said above, they
may be taken from him in case he is unworthy. The property of a childless wife
belongs to her husband, unless she is married by a rite not countenanced by the
law; in that case her property reverts to her parents. Woman’s property
consists only in wedding-gifts, tokens of affection, and gifts from her
brothers, father, and mother, as also what is given her after marriage by her
husband. All this goes to her children at her death.
As the preferred family is the joint-family, so the
village is possessed as a whole of its holdings in land. Thus the only full
discussion in Manu regarding boundaries (the tenth title) has to do with
boundaries between two villages. Yet it is clear from other passages that
private ownership in land under the king was recognized. He who first
cultivates wild land, owns it. There is also a Sutra rule: Animals, land, and
females are not lost by possession of another, which appears to imply
individual ownership in land. The land around a village on all sides for one
hundred ‘bows’ (about 600 feet) is common; and if crops are grown there and
cattle injure the crops, no damage can be exacted; but the fields appear to be
private property as they are fenced in.
Provincial
Government, War
The government of the country described in legal
literature is not different from that of the Sutras, and in most respects
agrees with the conditions represented in the epics, where government without a
king is so well known as to be the object of the most severe condemnation; and
it is regarded as essential that a king of good family should be at the head of
the state. Slave-born kings are known in history but tabooed in law. The king
is treated in the law-books under two heads, as general lord of the land and as
judge and executioner.
As lord of the land the king is a Zeus Agamemnon, a
human divinity incorporating the essence of the deities Indra,
Vayu, Yama, Varuna, Agni, etc., that is of the gods
who protect the world in the eight directions. In other words, his chief
function as lord is to protect, and he protects as a great deity in human form.
He has, to aid him, seven or eight councilors of hereditary office (‘whose
ancestors have been servants of kings’), with whom he daily consults as to
affairs of state and religion. His prime minister should be a learned priest;
he should appoint officials over all public works, mines, manufactures,
storehouses, etc. Various royal monopolies are mentioned (salt is one of them).
His officers must be brave and honest, and he himself must be brave and lead
his troops personally into battle, where he is to make it his duty to ‘kill
kings’, for those kings go to heaven who seek to slay each other in battle and
fight strenuously for that purpose. As overlord, the king receives a share of
the booty won in battle, and it is his duty to distribute such booty as has not
been taken singly among the soldiers. One military officer and a company of
soldiers he should place as a guard over each village and town, to protect
them. There should be a lord of one village, a lord of ten, (of twenty), of a
hundred, and a lord (or lords) of a thousand. It is the duty of the lord of one
village, gramika, to report all crimes to the dashapa or lord of ten, and the lord of ten shall report
likewise to the lord of twenty, and he to the lord of a hundred, and he to the
lord of a thousand. As much land as suffices for one family shall be the income
of the lord of one village and so on to the lord of a thousand, who shall enjoy
the revenue of a town. All these men (it is said) are probably knaves and must
be spied upon continually through the agency of a general superintendent in
every town, who shall scrutinize the conduct of all the governing lords, ‘for
the servants of kings appointed to protect generally become rascals who steal
the property of others’. The sum collected from his subjects by a just king (as
taxes) is a fiftieth part of the increment on cattle and gold, and the eighth,
sixth, or twelfth part of the crops; while common artisans pay tax by a day's
work monthly.
These provisions (of Manu) are followed by Vishnu, who
however omits the intermediate lords of twenty villages and recognizes only the
decimal system throughout. Instead of a thousand villages, Vishnu speaks of the
‘whole country’, and probably the two expressions were synonymous. Vishnu also
specifies eunuchs as guards of the king’s harem, not mentioned by Manu in
connection with the palace. Another point which brings Vishnu into line with
the Sutra authorities is found in his rule regarding taxes. He gives no such
option as Manu, but specifies one-sixth as the tax on grain and seeds and
one-fiftieth on cattle, gold, and clothes (all authorities exempt priests from
taxation-laws).
The men of war, according to Manu, are to be selected
for prominent places (in the van) from Kurukshetra,
the Matsyas, Panchalas, and
those born in Shurasena—all districts in the
neighborhood of Delhi, Jaipur, Kanauj, and Muttra—a
provision sufficiently indicative of the geographical origin of his code. It is
interesting to note that both Manu and Vishnu state that when a king has
conquered a foreign foe he shall make a prince of that country (not of his own)
the king there, and he shall not destroy the royal race of his foe unless that
royal race be of ignoble birth. He is to honor the gods and the customs of the
conquered country and grant exemption from taxation (for a time).
In his capacity as judge the king tries cases himself
or appoints a priest in his stead; but this latter provision is a later trait,
though found in the Sutras. The earlier rule is that the king himself shall try
cases daily and have built for that purpose a special hall as part of his
palace in the inner city, and even, as we saw in the Sutra period, act as
executioner. The fact that the king has also the pardoning power is implied in
the provision that if the thief come before the king and the king smite him or
let him go he is thereby purified, a provision which also brings up the
intricate question of the relation between legal punishment and religious
penance. For many of the legal punishments for gross crimes are set down not as
such but as religious expiations, and it is said that the king has to see to it
that these religious obligations are fulfilled. In some cases without doubt punishment
as a matter of law began as a matter of priestly religious law. The business of
the king as judge was not unremunerative, as every
debtor who was tried and convicted paid a tenth of the sum involved into the
royal treasury. According to Manu, if plaintiff or defendant is found guilty of
falsification in regard to a contested sum, twice the sum itself shall be paid
as a fine (to the king). The king’s chaplain has an important place in the
court of justice; he is chief of the councilors who as a body may include
members of other Aryan castes. If a deputy act for the king, later authorities
state that he should carry a seal-ring of the king as sign of authority. The
right of appeal is also admitted in later law-books, which assume that a case
may come up first before a family, or corporation, when if the judgment is
questioned the case may be tried by assemblies (of co-inhabitants or castes)
and then by judges duly appointed. Yajnavalkya and Närada also say that, when a lawsuit has been wrongly
decided, the trial must be repeated. According to Yajnavalkya appeal may be taken from corporations, etc., to the judge appointed by the
king. Such a judge is one appointed to act for the king in his own city or in
the provinces, a provision found also in epic literature. All the law-books
acknowledge the importance of the law of family, gild or corporation, and
assembly or greater corporation, of caste or co-inhabitants in making their own
laws, which the king must not contravene.
Family
Law
There is one aspect of legal literature which is very
significant of the origin of the completed codes. The laws, namely, frequently
contradict one another either by implication or directly, not only the laws in
general but those of the same code and even the laws placed in juxtaposition.
An example of such contradiction is what may be found in Manu’s code respecting
the sale of a daughter. Manu declares that if one girl has been shown to a
prospective bridegroom and another is given, he may marry them both for the
same price. In the same code (presumably the same Manu) says “Let no wise
father take even a small price for his daughter...for small or great this would
be a sale”; and finally: “If the giver of the price die after the price for a
girl has been paid, she shall be given to the (bridegroom's) brother if she is
willing”, and immediately after, “Even a slave should not accept a price in
exchange for his daughter”, with a couple of verses following in the tone of
the passage above, repudiating the sale of a daughter. Yet, under the head of
the fifteenth title of law, it is stated that a low-caste man courting a woman
of the highest caste deserves death (or corporal punishment); but one who
courts an equal shall pay the price (and take her) if her father consents. It was
an old provision that a fee or price (a yoke of oxen) should be paid to the
father, and though this was softened down to a ‘fee’ or ‘tax’, yet the advanced
code objects formally to this business transaction. At the same time the old
provision is retained, because it was a part of hereditary traditional law. In
the epic also, the rule against selling a daughter is recorded; but so strong
is the feeling against violating family-law that the man who purposes to sell
his daughter, because it is the custom in my family, is upheld in doing so by a
saint, who even declares that the sale is justified by the ancients and by God.
Here the girl is bought with gold and elephants and other costly things. On the
other hand, as a matter of dignity, the father of an aristocratic girl, more
particularly a princess, has in effect heavy expenses. Thus when king Virata weds his daughter he bestows upon his son-in-law
seven thousand horses and two hundred elephants. The didactic epic says that a
man who sells his daughter goes to hell; there is a general Sutra rule against
selling any human being.
In regard to infant marriages the Sutras generally
admit the advisability of marrying a girl when she is still too young to wear,
clothes, that is, before she becomes adult, or shows signs of maturity. The
later law and practice are all at variance on this point. One of the epic
heroes marries at sixteen a princess still playing with her dolls but old
enough to become a mother shortly afterwards. The epic rule is that a
bridegroom of thirty should marry a girl of ten, a bridegroom of twenty-one a
girl of seven. Arrian reports that Indian girls were
married at seven. Sita is said to have married Rama
at six. The rule of Manu is that a bridegroom of thirty shall marry a girl of
twelve, one of twenty-four, a girl of eight; he also recommends that a girl
shall not marry at all unless a suitable bridegroom appear; but again he countenances
infant-marriages.
The rule in regard to the levirate, or the assignment
of widows to another man to raise up sons for the deceased husband, is another
instance of the way in which the codes were assembled out of contradictory
material. In Manu there is a flat contradiction of the preceding provisions on
this point. No remarriage and no assignment of widows are permitted in a
passage directly following the injunction that a widow shall be so assigned,
for the purpose of giving her dead husband a son to pay him the funeral feast,
etc.
Marriage
: Suttee
These laws regarding women are on the whole the most
self-contradictory in the later codes. As the position of woman is more or less
indicative of the state of civilization, it is important to notice that the
high regard paid to woman is confined to her function as a mother of sons. The
bride must be a virgin (not a widow) and the remarriage of widows is generally
not countenanced; but the codes do not sanction the custom of suttee till late,
and the provisions for widows show that, though they probably lived miserably
and without honor, they were not expected to die with their husbands. The
Mahabharata and the Ramayana both recognize the custom of suttee, but only the
former (and probably not in an early part) gives a case of a royal widow
burning herself with her husband. It is perhaps the extension of a royal
custom, as in the epic, which has made the rule general, so that later law and
practice recommend suttee for all. A parallel would be the Self-choice or
election of a husband by a princess, afterwards regarded as an election-rule in
the case of other maidens. The mother is praised as equal to the father in
honor, and in default of sons she may inherit, but if she bear only daughters
or has no children she may be divorced. In general, a woman receives respect
only as potential or actual mother of sons. Manu repeats with unction the
dictum of the Sutras that a woman is never independent, and says that she may
be slain for unfaithfulness and divorced for barrenness; he also regards women
as too ‘unstable’ to be called as witnesses. The view that women are chattel is
yielding in the Shastra to a more enlightened opinion. In the epics also the
rigidity of the law is not upheld by the tenor of tales showing women in a very
different light from that exhibited in the didactic parts of the epic. Even at
a much later age women were students, as they were wise in antiquity, and the
annals of the law itself testify to the ability of the sex, for in the
eighteenth century one of the great legal commentaries on the Mitakshara, was written by a woman, Lakshmidevi.
At what time the Purdah (‘curtain’) rule came to confine women to the house is
uncertain; but probably not before foreign invasions had compelled the Hindu to
adopt it. The epics and law-books speak of confining a woman as a punishment
for ill-conduct, but Manu insists that ‘no man can really guard women by force’
. To go veiled is only a court-custom alluded to in both epics.
Deficient as are the legal text-books in arrangement
and self-contradictory as are their enactments, they form a priceless heritage
of a past which would otherwise have been largely lost to us, for they may be
accepted as reflecting real and not artificial or invented conditions of life.
Very material evidence has been furnished in the last few years as regards the
trustworthy character of the information given by authors of the law-books. As
remarked above concerning the Sutras, the idea that Brahman tradition is
manufactured in order to glorify the Brahmans and that in the time of Buddha
there were no castes, is rendered inadmissible by the fact that all Hindu
literature acknowledges the main facts as stated in the epics and law-books.
The fresh evidence on this point is supplied by the text of the Arthashastra called the Kautiliya,
which may date from about 300 BC and is in accord with the Sutras and Shastras in all the chief points which these works have in
common. This Arthashastra, which forms the subject of
Chapter XIX in this work, recognizes castes and mixed castes and agrees with
the Shastra of the law-givers in a multitude of instances, showing that the
scheme of law arranged by the Brahmans was neither ideal nor invented but based
upon actual lifer. Here for example is repeated almost verbatim the rule
against debts between father and son; the kinds of marriage are the same; the
antithesis between Arya and Shudra is maintained; the rule that the wage is
one-tenth the gain ‘without previous agreement’ is identical with that of Yajnavalkya cited above, etc. As the Kautiliya is a manual of rules imposed by a practical statesman; it is impossible to
suppose that the conditions it depicts are imaginary, yet the same conditions
are found in the Sutras, etc. If it was indisputable that this work belonged to
the third or fourth century BC, it would be of the utmost importance
historically. As it is, some of the provisions of the Kautiliya agree with those of later rather than earlier law-books, and for the present it
is not advisable to accept all its rules as belonging to the time assigned to
the work as a whole.
We see in the law-books the king of a limited realm
still more or less of a patriarch among his peoples; a people divided into
general orders representing the military, priestly, and agricultural or
mercantile classes, still mingling freely with each other, intermarrying, but
with due regard for the respect paid to the higher orders, and utterly devoid
of the ‘caste’ rules later adopted in respect of food and marriage. The family
is usually monogamous though it may be polygamous, and there are traces of the
family-marriage, in which a wife marries a group of brothers. The menial work
of house-life is carried on by slaves and half-breeds, who also do most of the
village labor and serve as petty craftsmen. More skilled workers like
chariot-makers are of almost Aryan rank and are not excluded from society. The
laws are harsh and cruel as regards punishment (the worker in gold who defrauds
the king, for example, is, according to Manu, ‘to be chopped to pieces with
knives’), but a regard for truth and justice is the dominant trait of the law,
which, if it may be personified, has at times a naive air of blandly but
perplexedly seeking to steer a course between that which it thinks is right and
ought to think is right, because the one has been reasoned out and the other
has been handed down as part of ‘revelation’ or law divine.
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