Śramaṇa


The term *śramaṇa* originated as a descriptor for Vedic sages recognized for their ritualistic efforts, but its meaning evolved to encompass wandering ascetics who, unlike followers of Brahmanism and Hinduism, rejected the authority of the Vedas and formed a distinct spiritual tradition known as the Śramaṇa tradition, which included movements like Jainism and Buddhism.

⭐ In the context of Indian religions, the term *śramaṇa* initially described individuals associated with what practice?


⭐ Core Definition: Śramaṇa

In Indian religions and philosophies, a śramaṇa (from Sanskrit) or samaṇa (from Pali), sometimes anglicised as shramana, is a person "who labours, toils, or exerts themselves for some higher or religious purpose" or a "seeker, or ascetic, one who performs acts of austerity".

In the early Vedic texts, the term is an epithet for the great rishi sages in association with their ritualistic exertion. However, it has since come to refer to a broad class of spiritual movements originally comprising wandering ascetics from ancient India—collectively called the Śramaṇa tradition, Shramanic tradition, or occasionally Shramanism—historically parallel to but distinct from the Vedic religion, Brahmanism, and their Hindu successor movements. The Śramaṇa tradition includes Jainism, Buddhism, and others such as the Ājīvika, Ajñana, and Cārvāka, while definitively excluding Hinduism. The tradition's name comes from the semantic narrowing of the term śramaṇa to mean a religious individual who specifically rejects the authority of the Vedas; however, the word did not hold this connotation until certain post-Vedic texts considered canonical by Buddhists and Jains. Similarly, in Indian philosophy, the terms āstika versus nāstika largely equate to this distinction between Vedic versus non-Vedic belief systems.

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HINT: Originally, *śramaṇa* functioned as an epithet for Vedic sages, acknowledging their dedicated exertion in performing complex ritualistic practices central to the Vedic tradition.

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