Origin and Types of the State – Ancient India

Chapter – 2

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Harshit Sharma

Alumnus (BHU)

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  • Modern political works explore the origin of the State extensively, though no historical evidence on the very first political organization exists.
  • Speculations on state origin rely on scientific methods, evolution theory, and comparisons to uncivilized societies, an approach unknown to ancient thinkers.
  • Ancient Indian views, found in Mahabharata and Dighanikaya, attribute the State’s origin to divine intervention or public agreement.
  • Both texts describe a Golden Age without government, where people lived in harmony due to their innate virtue.
  • Moral decline eventually led to chaos and lawlessness (matsyanyaya – “law of the jungle”), prompting divine intervention to restore order.
  • In the Mahabharata, Brahmadeva created a king, Virajas, who governed under a divine code, and people accepted his rule to end anarchy.
  • Similar views appear in the Dighanikaya; however, Mahajanasammata emerged as king by public choice without divine creation, accepted in exchange for a tax.
  • Hindu and Buddhist beliefs about a Golden Age preceding government imply that society predates government, supporting the idea that language evolves before grammar.
  • Texts by Narada and Brihaspati reference the Golden Age and subsequent anarchy, but do not add to theories on State origin.
  • Hindu thinkers saw the State as essential for societal order and progression, viewing it as a divine institution inherent to human nature.
  • There’s an implicit social contract notion in ancient texts: the people agreed to governance for protection, granting the king a tax (16%) as compensation.

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