The 'Janapadas' are the major realms or
kingdoms of
Vedic (
Iron Age)
India, by the
6th century BC evolving into the sixteen classical
Mahajanapadas .
Origins
The political process among the ancient
Indo-Aryans appears to have originally started with semi-nomadic
tribal units called ''Jana'' (
Latin ''gens''). Early
Vedic texts attest several Janas or tribes of the Aryans, living in semi-nomadic tribal state, fighting among themselves and with other Non-Aryan tribes for cows, sheeps and green pastures. These early
Rigvedic Janas in the course of the early Indian
Iron Age coalesced into the geographiaclly fixed ''Janapadas''.
The term ''janapadá'' is a
tatpurusha, composed of ''jana'' "tribe" and ''pada'' "foot". From its earliest attestation, the word has a double meaning of "realm, territory" and "subject population". A ''janapadin'' is the ruler of a ''janapada''. Dunkel (2002) compares
Greek ''andrapodon'' "slave", compares
PIE "fetters" (i.e. "what is attached to the feet"). Sanskrit ''padám'' usually taken to mean "footprint, trail" diverges in accent from the PIE reconstruction.
For the sense of "population of the land", ''padasya janas'', the inverted ''padajana'' would be expected. A primary meaning of "place of the people", ''janasya padam'' does not explain why the compound is of masculine gender. An original
dvandva "land and people" is conceivable, but a dual inflection would be expected.
Lists
Ancient Sanskrit texts like Ashtadhyayi (IV.4.168-175), Ramayana (IV/41-43), Mahabharata (VII/11/16-17; VIII/8/18-20)) and numerous Puranas (''Bhuvanakosa list of countries'') refer to many ''Janapadas'' of ancient times.
Panini's Ashtadhyayi furnishes a list of ''fifteen'' Kshatriya
monarchical ''Janapadas'' viz Salveya, Gandhari, Magadha, Kalinga, Surasena, Kosala, Ajada, Kuru, Salva, Pratyagratha, Kalakuta, Ashmaka, Kamboja, Avanti and Kunti. Besides, there were those following the
republican constitutions.
In context of Krsna digvijay, the
Mahabharata furnishes a key list of ''twenty-five'' ancient ''Janapadas'' viz:
Anga,
Vanga,
Kalinga,
Magadha,
Kasi,
Kosala,
Vatsa, Garga, Karusha, Pundra,
Avanti, Dakshinatya, Parvartaka, Dasherka,
Kashmira, Ursa,
Pishacha, Mudgala,
Kamboja, Vatadhana,
Chola,
Pandya, Trigarta, Malava, and Darada (MBH 7/11/15-17). Besides, there were Janapadas of
Kurus and
Panchalas also.
Ramayana (a later list) includes ''Janapadas'' of Andhras, Pundras, Cholas, Pandyas, Keralas, Mekhalas, Utkalas, Dasharnas, Abravantis, Avantis, Vidarbhas, Mlecchas, Pulindas, Surasenas, Prasthalas, Bharatas, Kurus, Madrakas, Kambojas, Daradas, Kiratas, Tangana, Yavanas, Sakas (''from Saka-dvipa'') Chinas, Maha-Chinas, Niharas etc.
The ''Bhuvanakosa Section'' of numerous
Puranas divides ancient
Indian
subcontinent into (1) the
Dakshinapatha (''Southern India''), (2) the
Madhyadesa (''Mid India''), (3) the
Prachya (''Eastern India''), (4) the
Aparanta (''Western India''), (5) the
Udichya or ''north/north-west'' division, (6) the Vindyavasins, and (7) the Parvatashrayins, and in the detailed list of countries, it refers many ''Janapadas'' of ancient times (See:
Kirfel's list of the countries of Bhuvanakosha)
By circa sixth century BCE, many of these ''Janapadas'' further evolved into larger political entities by the process of merger and land-grabbing which eventually led to the formation of bigger kingdoms known in
Buddhist texts as the
Mahajanapadas or the great nations (a
karmadharaya of ''
maha'' "great" and ''janapada'' "country").
See also
★
Mahajanapadas
References
★ George Dunkel, ''Vedic janapada and Ionic andrapodon; with notes on Vedic drupadam and IE pedom "place" and "fetter"'', Indo-European Perspectives (ed. M. R. V. Southern), JIES Monograph No. 43 (2002).