VedaShruti Literature4 Arcikas

Samaveda

सामवेद

The Veda of Sacred Melodies

The liturgical heart of Vedic worship — 1,140 mantras set to sacred melodies (Sāmans), forming the musical foundation of the Soma yajña and the source of Indian classical music.

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About This Text

The Samaveda (सामवेद) is the Veda of melodies and chant. Nearly all of its verses are drawn from the Rig Veda, but here they are rearranged and set to elaborate musical patterns called Sāmans. The text served as the songbook of the Udgātṛ priest during Soma sacrifices, transforming recited hymns into sung liturgy. Through its melodic structures — including stobha syllables, vocal ornamentation, and prescribed tonal patterns — the Samaveda laid the groundwork for the Gāndharva Veda and the classical music tradition of India.

How This Text Is Organised

The Samaveda follows a four-level hierarchy of arcikas, prapathakas, dashatis, and mantras.

Arcikas

Major collections

Prapathakas

Chapters within arcikas

Dashatis

Groups of ten verses

Mantras

Individual chant-verses

Available Reading Features

This edition of the Samaveda on Vedapath includes:

Sanskrit

Sanskrit Samhita Patha (Devanagari)

Transliteration

IAST Transliteration

Saman

Sāman melody names and stobha elements

Translations

Translations in 30 languages

Commentary

Sāyaṇa commentary, ritual context, and Vedic enrichment

Arcikas of the Samaveda

The Samaveda is traditionally divided into four Arcikas (collections).
Each Arcika serves a distinct liturgical and musical purpose.

Pūrvārcika

The First Collection

Foundation of Sāmavedic chant with 585 Rigvedic source-verses arranged by deity — Agni, Indra, and Soma Pavamāna.

AgneyaĀindraPavamānaSoma

Āraṇyaka Kāṇḍa

The Forest Section

Forest hymns meant for solitary recitation in the wilderness, bridging external ritual and internal contemplation.

ĀraṇyakaForest Hymns

Mahānāmnī Ārcika

The Great Names

Ten powerful Indra mantras forming a sacred appendix between the two Arcikas.

IndraMahānāmnī

Uttarārcika

The Second Collection

The ritual performance collection organized by Soma yajña sequence, containing elaborate chant elaborations.

Soma YajñaRitual SequenceGāna

Frequently Asked Questions

The Pūrvārcika is the first and foundational ārcika of the Sāmaveda, containing 585 Rigvedic ṛcas arranged in 6 prapāṭhakas. These verses serve as yoni (source) texts from which Sāman melodies and gāna expansions are formed for ritual chanting.

It is organized chiefly by deity-currents aligned to ritual function: an opening Āgneya section centered on Agni (establishing and protecting the rite), a large middle Āindra span centered on Indra (Soma invitation, victory, protection), and a concluding Pavamāna section centered on Soma’s purification through the filter.

Pavamāna hymns present Soma as self-purifying as it passes through the pavitra (filter), becoming fit for offering. In the Pūrvārcika they provide the culminating purification register of the Soma-sacrifice, complementing the earlier Agni establishment and Indra victory/invitation sequences.

It is traditionally associated with quieter, less public modes of recitation and practice—symbolically “forest” contexts—where the sāman is approached with restraint and interior focus, and where the verses’ purification symbolism is contemplated as much as performed.

Soma’s self-purifying flow (pavamāna) is central: the verses praise Soma as it clarifies and becomes fit for offering, and they stress that this purification is what generates ritual efficacy and empowers divine action, especially in relation to Indra.

The verses serve as the textual bases from which Sāmans are sung; the Āraṇyaka Kāṇḍa gathers chant-suitable ṛks that can be melodically elaborated in gāna, with a performance ethos that favors controlled, purified sound consistent with its ‘forest’ character.

Because the collection is associated with ritually weighty epithets—‘great names’—that invoke Indra’s comprehensive sovereignty and efficacy; the daśati concentrates such naming-power into a compact chantable unit.

Indra is central; beyond martial victory, he is praised as kavi/vidvān—the discerning knower who guides the yajña correctly and protects the sacrificer, ensuring success and stability.

Its ten verses provide the textual basis for Sāman melodies sung by the Udgātṛ group in Indra-oriented stotra contexts, intensifying invocation and reinforcing themes of protection, victory, and the right conduct of the sacrifice.

The Uttarārcika is the “Later Collection” of the Sāmaveda, presenting verses in expanded sāman form with melodic shaping and stobha insertions so they can be sung directly in Soma-yajña performance.

Soma—especially as Pavamāna, the purifying flow—and Indra in Aindra stutis. Soma hymns emphasize purification and ritual activation; Indra hymns emphasize victory, illumination, and empowering the sacrifice.

It provides performance-ready sāman expansions that are selected and organized within gāna traditions for specific ritual moments. In practice, it functions as a key source-text for what the Udgātṛ sings from the songbooks during Soma rites.