The Puranas, a genre of important Hindu, …

Years: 477BCE - 334BCE

The Puranas, a genre of important Hindu, Jain and Buddhist religious texts, notably consisting of narratives of the history of the universe from creation to destruction, genealogies of kings, heroes, sages, and demigods, and descriptions of Hindu cosmology, philosophy, and geography, begin to be compiled about this time.

Vyasa, the narrator of the Mahabharata, is traditionally considered the compiler of the Puranas.

However, the earliest written versions date from the time of the Gupta Empire (third to fifth centuries CE) and much material may be dated, through historical references and other means, to this period and the succeeding centuries.

The texts were probably written all over India.

The date of the production of the written texts does not define the date of origin of the Puranas.

On one hand, they existed in some oral form before being written while at the same time, they have been incrementally modified well into the sixteenth century and perhaps down to the present day.

An early reference is found in the Chandogya Upanishad (7.1.2). (circa 500 BCE.)

The Brhadaranyaka Upanishad refers to purana as the "fifth Veda", itihāsapurāṇaṃ pañcamaṃ vedānāṃ, reflecting the early religious importance of these myths, presumably then in purely oral form.

Importantly, the most famous form of itihāsapurāṇaṃ is the Mahabharata.

The term also appears in the Atharvaveda 11.7.24.

According to Pargiter, the "original Purana" may date to the time of the final redaction of the Vedas.

Gavin Flood connects the rise of the written Purana historically with the rise of devotional cults centering upon a particular deity in the Gupta era: the Puranic corpus is a complex body of materials that advance the views of various competing cults.

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