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Vyavahāramālā

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vyavahāramālā is a treatise in Sanskrit on jurisprudence and legal practices composed by some scholar from Kerala sometime during the 16th-17th centuries CE. This was the standard reference for legal practices in the kingly courts of the erstwhile kingdoms of Travancore and Cochin till the adoption of modern legal practices under the supervision and guidance of John Munro (1778 – 1858) who had served as Resident and Diwan of the States of Travancore and Cochin between 1810 and 1819.[1] However, Munro's reforms did not make Vyavahāramālā completely obsolete. Munro used it to develop an Anglo-Indian code of law for the Travancore kingdom called Caṭṭavariyōla and established a hierarchy of courts and the rules for presenting cases in those courts.[2]

Vyavahāramālā is a digest of rules on legal procedure extracted from the well-known ancient Smṛti called Parāśarasmṛiti.[1] Based on the selection and organization of the verses collected in the Vyavahāramālā one could see that is a it is a collection of verses on law and legal procedure based on the Vyavahāranirṇaya of Varadaraja.[2] It is a work consisting of 1234 verses and the main part is divided into 19 chapters called prakaraṇa-s. Before starting the prakaraṇa-s, the author has dealt with some general requirements of legal procedures like qualities of the judge, the layout of the court, etc. The first eleven prakaraṇa-s deal with civil laws, the next five prakaraṇa-s deal with criminal laws, the seventeenth prakaraṇa discusses laws relating to partition of property, the eighteenth one deals with some further aspects of criminal laws and the final prakaraṇa is devoted miscellaneous topics not touched upon in the previous chapters.[3]

Authorship

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Ulloor S. Paramesvara Aiyer in his multi-volume "Kerala Sahithya Charithram" ("History of Literature in Kerala") claimed that Mazhamaṅgalaṃ Nārāyaṇan Naṃpūtiri (c. 1540–1610) who hailed from Kerala, India was the author of Vyavahāramāla.[4] But curiously, in a Malyalam translation of Vyavahāramāla authored by Ulloor S. Paramesvara Aiyer himself, there is no mention of the authorship of Vyavahāramāla.[1] It appears that the authorship of Vyavahāramāla has not been determined definitively.[5]

Contents

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The following list of topics discussed in Vyavahāramāla indicates the nature of the contents in the work.[6]

  1. Origin, definition and classifications of vyavahāra
  2. Dharma of chief justice
  3. The construction of court
  4. Non-suit
  5. Punishments: the king's authority
  6. The methods of court procedure
  7. Compromise of vādi-pradivādi
  8. Trail the dispute according to pramāṇas
  9. The evidence as a witness
  10. Documents of victory-judgment(jayapatra)
  11. Truth ordeal
  12. Payment and recovery of debts
  13. The definition of interest
  14. Pledge-mortgages
  15. Surety-ship
  16. Payment and recovery of debts
  17. Sale-without ownership
  18. Partnership
  19. Resumption of gift
  20. Law of master (Breach of contract of service)
  21. Non-payment of wages
  22. Swamipāla vivāda prakaraṇa
  23. Custom according to the caste and tribes
  24. Non-delivery after sale
  25. Goods buying and selling
  26. Boundary disputes
  27. Defamation: classification of crimes
  28. Assault
  29. Theft
  30. Crimes of violence
  31. Adultery and rape
  32. Partition
  33. Gambling and betting
  34. Miscellaneous matters

Full texts

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  • The full text of Vyavahāramālā in Malayalam script with a translation in Malayalam by Ulloor S. Paramesvara Aiyar is available in Wikimedia at the link HERE.
  • The full text of Vyavahāramālā in Devanagari script with an English translation is available as part of a Ph D thesis submitted to Kerala University in December 2002: Asoka kumar V (2002). Vyavaharamala: Translation and study (PDF). Kerala University. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  • Full text of Vyavahāramālā in Devanagari script is available in the Internet Archive at the link HERE.
  • For a detailed account of the work, see the PhD thesis on Vyavahaaramālā submitted to Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit in 2008: Rajee P V (2008). Vyavaharamala: A text on Indian jurisprudence. Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskri. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  • A digitized scanned copy of a palm-leaf manuscript of a detailed commentary in Malayalam of Vyavahāramālā composed probably sometime before 1809 has been preserved in the Gundert Collection in the University of Tübingen. The same is available for view at the link HERE and for download at the link HERE (270 MB).

References

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  1. ^ a b c S. Paramesvara Aiyar (1925). Vyavaharamala (edited with an introduction and an appendix) (PDF). Thiruvananthapuram: Govt of Travancore. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
  2. ^ a b Davis, D. R. (1999). "Recovering the Indigenous Legal Traditions of India: Classical Hindu Law in Practice in Late Medieval Kerala". Journal of Indian Philosophy. 27 (3): 159–213. doi:10.1023/a:1026483519342.
  3. ^ Asoka kumar V (2002). Vyavaharamala: Translation and study (PDF). Kerala University. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  4. ^ Ulloor S. Paramesvara Aiyer (September 1954). Kerala Sahithya Charithram Part II. Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India: Department of Publications, University of Travancore. Retrieved 15 July 2024. (pages 293–301)
  5. ^ Rajee P V (2008). Vyavaharamala: A text on Indian jurisprudence. Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskri. Retrieved 24 July 2024. (A PhD thesis on Vyavahaaramālā submitted to Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskri in 2008)
  6. ^ Rajee P V (2008). Vyavaharamala: A text on Indian jurisprudence (PDF). Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskri. Retrieved 24 July 2024. (Chapter IV of a PhD thesis on Vyavahaaramālā submitted to Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskri in 2008)