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Agni Purana — Vyavahara, Shloka 5

Chapter 255: दायविभागकथनम्

On the Division of Inheritance

पितृद्रव्याविनाशेन यदन्यत् स्वयमर्जयेत् मैत्रमौद्वाहिकञ्चैव दायादानान्न तद्भवेत्

pitṛdravyāvināśena yadanyat svayamarjayet maitramaudvāhikañcaiva dāyādānānna tadbhavet

Apa jua yang diperoleh seseorang dengan usaha sendiri tanpa mengurangkan harta bapa, demikian juga yang diperoleh melalui persahabatan (hadiah daripada sahabat) dan yang diterima berkaitan perkahwinan, tidak menjadi harta pusaka yang boleh dibahagi kepada para waris.

पितृfather/ancestral
पितृ:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध)
TypeNoun
Rootपितृ (प्रातिपदिक)
Formcomponent of compound
द्रव्यproperty/wealth
द्रव्य:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध)
TypeNoun
Rootद्रव्य (प्रातिपदिक)
Formcomponent of compound
अविनाशेनwithout destruction (of)
अविनाशेन:
Karana (करण)
TypeNoun
Rootअविनाश (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, तृतीया (instrumental), एकवचन; with compound sense ‘without destruction’
यत्whatever/that which
यत्:
Karma (कर्म)
TypeNoun
Rootयद् (सर्वनाम-प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग, प्रथमा/द्वितीया, एकवचन; relative pronoun referring to ‘that which’
अन्यत्other (additional)
अन्यत्:
Karma (कर्म)
TypeAdjective
Rootअन्य (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग, प्रथमा/द्वितीया, एकवचन; qualifies यत्
स्वयम्oneself
स्वयम्:
Vishesana (विशेषण)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootस्वयम् (अव्यय)
FormAdverb (स्वतन्त्रकर्तृवाचक-अव्यय)
अर्जयेत्should acquire/earn
अर्जयेत्:
Kriya (क्रिया)
TypeVerb
Rootअर्ज् (धातु)
Formविधिलिङ् (optative), परस्मैपद, प्रथमपुरुष (3rd person), एकवचन
मैत्रम्(property) from a friend / friendly gift
मैत्रम्:
Karma (कर्म)
TypeNoun
Rootमैत्र (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग, प्रथमा/द्वितीया, एकवचन; kind of property (gift from friend)
औद्वाहिकम्(property) connected with marriage
औद्वाहिकम्:
Karma (कर्म)
TypeNoun
Rootऔद्वाहिक (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग, प्रथमा/द्वितीया, एकवचन; kind of property (marriage-related gift)
and
:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootच (अव्यय)
FormConjunction (समुच्चयार्थक-अव्यय)
एवindeed/just
एव:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/emphasis)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootएव (अव्यय)
FormEmphatic particle (अवधारणार्थक-अव्यय)
दायादानात्from the giving to heirs / from inheritance-gift
दायादानात्:
Apadana (अपादान)
TypeNoun
Rootदायाद (प्रातिपदिक) + दान (प्रातिपदिक)
Formषष्ठी-तत्पुरुष ‘दायादस्य दानम्’ (gift to an heir) or determinative; नपुंसकलिङ्ग, पञ्चमी (ablative), एकवचन
not
:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/negation)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootन (अव्यय)
FormNegation particle (निषेध-अव्यय)
तत्that
तत्:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeNoun
Rootतद् (सर्वनाम-प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग, प्रथमा (nominative), एकवचन; refers to the aforementioned acquisitions
भवेत्should be/become
भवेत्:
Kriya (क्रिया)
TypeVerb
Rootभू (धातु)
Formविधिलिङ् (optative), परस्मैपद, प्रथमपुरुष (3rd person), एकवचन

Lord Agni (in discourse to the sage Vasiṣṭha, in the Agni Purana’s dharma-legal sections)

Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Dharmashastra","secondary_vidya":"Arthashastra","practical_application":"Classifying self-acquired property and certain receipts (friend-gifts, marriage-related gains) as non-partible/non-inheritable vis-à-vis paternal estate, aiding dispute resolution.","sutra_style":true}

Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Non-partible acquisitions: self-earned, friend-gifts, and marriage-related gains","lookup_keywords":["self-acquired property","non-inheritable","friend gift","marriage gifts","partition law"],"quick_summary":"Property gained by one’s own effort without diminishing paternal assets, as well as gifts from friends and certain marriage-related receipts, are treated as not forming part of divisible ancestral inheritance."}

Concept: Distinction between ancestral estate (subject to partition) and personal acquisitions (protected from compulsory division).

Application: During partition, segregate self-acquired assets and specified gifts/nuptial gains from the divisible pool; document provenance to prevent litigation.

Khanda Section: Rajadharma & Vyavahara (Dharma-shastra: inheritance and property law)

Primary Rasa: shanta

Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A partition scene where a scribe separates two ledgers: ancestral property on one side, self-earned and gifted items on the other; a friend presents a gift; marriage procession symbols indicate nuptial gains.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural; stylized scribe with palm-leaf manuscripts dividing categories, friend offering a wrapped gift, wedding symbols (garlands, lamps) in background, clear separation of piles.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore; gold-embellished gift box and wedding ornaments, central ledger with ornate border, figures in frontal arrangement emphasizing classification.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore; instructional composition with labeled-like visual grouping—ancestral chest vs personal chest—fine linework, subdued palette.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature; detailed courtly accounting with two carpets of goods, friend presenting nazr-like gift, wedding entourage hinted in a side vignette."}

Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Hamsadhwani","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}

Sandhi Resolution Notes: पितृद्रव्याविनाशेन → पितृ-द्रव्य-अविनाशेन (compound chain; sense ‘without destroying ancestral property’); यदन्यत् → यत् + अन्यत्; स्वयमर्जयेत् → स्वयम् + अर्जयेत्; मैत्रमौद्वाहिकम् → मैत्रम् + औद्वाहिकम्; औद्वाहिकञ्चैव → औद्वाहिकम् + च + एव; दायादानान्न → दायादानात् + न (final -t before n).

Related Themes: Agni Purana 255 (definitions of dāya vs svārjita)

P
Pitṛ (father/ancestor)
D
Dāyāda (heirs)

FAQs

It teaches a technical rule of dharma-legal classification: self-acquired wealth earned without reducing ancestral property, gifts from friends, and marriage-related acquisitions are treated as non-divisible (not subject to partition among heirs).

Beyond myth and ritual, the Agni Purana preserves practical jurisprudence (vyavahāra) on inheritance and property—showing it functions as a compendium of governance and civil law alongside theology.

By preventing unjust partition and protecting rightful ownership, it upholds dharma in family life; such fairness is treated as merit-bearing conduct that reduces conflict and supports social order.