मनुस्मृति
The Laws of Manu - Ancient Indian Dharmashastra
The Manusmriti is the most authoritative and widely studied Dharmashastra of ancient India — a comprehensive code attributed to Manu, the progenitor of humanity, encompassing law, ethics, duties, governance, rituals, and the moral ordering of society.
Start ReadingThe Manusmriti, also known as the Manava-Dharmashastra, is the foundational text of Hindu legal and ethical tradition. Attributed to Manu, the first lawgiver, it systematically addresses the duties (dharma) of individuals across all stages of life and all sections of society. Spanning topics from creation cosmology and sacraments to civil law, penances, and the nature of karma, the Manusmriti has profoundly shaped Indian jurisprudence, philosophy, and social thought for over two millennia.
The Manusmriti is structured into 12 Adhyayas (chapters), each addressing distinct aspects of dharma, law, and moral conduct.
12 chapters of sacred law
Verses read one by one
This edition of the Manusmriti on Vedapath includes:
The Manusmriti is composed of 12 Adhyayas.
Each Adhyaya covers creation, duties, law, governance, penances, or the nature of karma and liberation.
Adhyāya 1 serves as a programmatic prologue to the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra, situating its normative pres
Adhyaya 1 functions as a programmatic prologue to the Manava-Dharmashastra, framing normative rules within a cosmological and genealogical account.
Adhyāya 2 situates the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra within the wider Dharmaśāstra tradition by defining the r
Adhyaya 2 defines the recognized authorities of dharma: Veda, Smriti, and customary conduct of exemplary people.
Adhyāya 3 of the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra offers a programmatic statement of gṛhastha (householder) norms
Adhyaya 3 articulates grihastha (householder) norms, anchoring social reproduction and ritual economy within a Brahmanical legal-ritual framework.
Adhyāya 4 functions as a prescriptive handbook for the Brahmin householder (gṛhastha), especially th
Adhyaya 4 presents a prescriptive handbook for the Brahmin householder, with a graded typology of livelihoods and codes of conduct.
Adhyāya 5 offers a layered Dharmaśāstra account of bodily discipline and social order through dietar
Adhyaya 5 presents a layered treatment of bodily discipline through food regulation, impurity rules, and household governance.
Adhyāya 6 of the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra sets out a normative blueprint for late-life religious practice
Adhyaya 6 presents a normative blueprint for late-life religious life within the ashrama framework.
Adhyāya 7 of the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra is a programmatic rājadharma section that frames kingship as a
Adhyaya 7 frames kingship as a divinely constituted office and treats danda (punishment) as the central instrument for maintaining social order.
Adhyāya 8 is a core juridical unit of the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra, presenting a procedural and ethical b
Adhyaya 8 presents a procedural and ethical blueprint for dispute resolution in a royal court.
Adhyāya 9 sets out a composite legal-ethical program characteristic of Dharmaśāstra compilation, mov
Adhyaya 9 presents a composite legal-ethical program from household regulation to succession law and statecraft.
Adhyāya 10 of the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra sets out a detailed, prescriptive taxonomy of social status an
Adhyaya 10 presents a detailed prescriptive taxonomy of social status and livelihood through the four-varna model.
Adhyāya 11 of the Mānava-Dharmaśāstra functions as a systematic catalogue of transgressions and corr
Adhyaya 11 is a systematic catalogue of transgressions and corresponding remedies in Dharmashastra literature.
Adhyāya 12 serves as a doctrinal and meta-legal conclusion that frames Dharmaśāstra ethics through a
Adhyaya 12 frames Dharmashastra ethics through a theory of karma, mental discipline, and post-mortem consequences.
The text establishes dharma as a cosmic and socially organizing principle, presenting legal-ethical norms as grounded in creation, sacred chronology (yugas/manvantaras), and an authoritative teacher-to-student transmission (Manu to Bhṛgu to the sages).
The chapter states that four historical social classifications (brāhmaṇa, kṣatriya, vaiśya, śūdra) originate from the cosmic body and assigns functions: brāhmaṇas are linked to teaching, learning, officiating and receiving gifts; kṣatriyas to protection, governance-related duties, and restraint; vaiśyas to herding, agriculture, trade, and lending; śūdras to service of the other three groups.
As in other classical Indian normative texts, the chapter uses cosmology to authorize social and political order. Compared with the Arthaśāstra—more administrative and statecraft-oriented—this chapter foregrounds sacred origin narratives and ritual-ethical hierarchy as the basis for governance and social regulation, illustrating complementary strands in ancient Indian legal-political thought.
The text foregrounds a hierarchy of dharma authorities—Veda (śruti), smṛti, exemplary customary practice (sadācāra), and personal moral satisfaction—presenting dharma as grounded in textual transmission and regulated social practice.
The chapter assigns differentiated ritual and educational roles through archaic social classifications: dvija groups are presented as eligible for Vedic initiation and student discipline (upanayana, Sāvitrī recitation), while teacher figures (ācārya, upādhyāya, guru, ṛtvij) are defined by instructional and ritual functions; students are regulated through purity rules, daily rites, begging routines, and strict deference protocols.
Adhyāya 2 is significant as a Dharmaśāstra-style synthesis that combines jurisprudential theory (sources of law), spatial legitimation (sacred regions), and institutional discipline (education and ritual procedure). Comparable concerns appear in texts like the Arthaśāstra, which also systematize normative order and governance, though the Arthaśāstra emphasizes statecraft and administrative regulation more than initiation rites and Vedic student conduct.
The text presents the household as the central institutional unit for sustaining social order through regulated marriage, daily domestic offerings (pañcamahāyajña), obligatory hospitality, and recurring ancestral rites (śrāddha), treating these practices as interlinked duties with legal-ritual consequences.
The chapter assigns the twice-born householder responsibility for marriage selection, household ritual maintenance, guest reception, and śrāddha administration; it positions Brahmin specialists as key recipients/officiants whose perceived learning and conduct affect ritual efficacy; it frames women primarily within marriage, household auspiciousness, and kinship continuity; and it describes varṇa-ranked marital permissions and exclusions as historical social classifications embedded in the normative system.
As a Dharmaśāstra template for domestic governance, this chapter parallels other normative traditions that link household discipline to state and social stability. Compared with the Arthaśāstra’s governance-centered pragmatics, Manusmṛti here emphasizes ritualized legitimacy—marriage typologies, hospitality, and śrāddha—as mechanisms that reproduce hierarchy and moral order, later influencing commentarial law, regional digests, and customary adjudication.
The text foregrounds an ideal of regulated household life in which livelihood, daily conduct, and ritual learning are integrated: economic activity is to be ethically constrained, hospitality and ritual duties maintained, and Vedic recitation governed by detailed rules of purity and timing (including extensive anadhyāya conditions).