धनुर्वेद — युद्धकला, भौतिकी और धातुविज्ञान का प्राचीन शास्त्र
The Vedic science of martial arts, archery, weaponry, and military strategy — rooted in the Yajurveda — which gave the world Kalaripayattu, Wootz Steel, and the physics of projectile motion.
Dhanurveda (धनुर्वेद — "Science of the Bow") is the Upaveda associated with the Yajurveda. Far more than a manual for warriors, it is a systematic science encompassing human anatomy, physics of projectile motion, metallurgy, psychology of combat, and military strategy.
Dhanurveda's legacy includes the world's most sophisticated pre-industrial steel (Wootz/Damascus Steel), the mother of all Asian martial arts (Kalaripayattu), and a comprehensive understanding of kinetics, ballistics, and biomechanics encoded centuries before Newton.
Combat arts — the physical science of body movement, force, leverage, and timing in warfare.
Science of weapons — design, materials, aerodynamics, and the physics of projectile trajectories.
Metallurgy — the science of forging, alloying, and heat-treating metals for superior weapons and armour.
Military strategy — psychology of combat, army formation, siege warfare, espionage, and statecraft.
The Agni Purana contains the most comprehensive catalogue of Vedic weaponry — classifying 32 types of weapons into Mukta (thrown), Amukta (held), Muktamukta (thrown and held), and Yantra-mukta (machine-propelled). It describes the aerodynamics of arrows, the design of bows for different combat ranges, and the chemistry of incendiary weapons (Agni Astra).
Kautilya's Arthashastra (300 BC) is the world's first complete treatise on military strategy, espionage, and statecraft. It covers army organisation, intelligence networks, psychological warfare, siege engineering, and the use of war elephants. Modern military historians compare it to Sun Tzu's Art of War — but with far greater operational detail.
Dhanurveda texts contain detailed analysis of projectile physics centuries before Newton formalised the laws of motion. The Vishnu Dharmottara Purana and Manasollasa describe optimal arrow release angles, bow draw weights, and the effect of wind and gravity on trajectory — empirical ballistics derived from systematic observation.
Fletching angles, shaft flexibility (spine), and tip weights described for maximum range and accuracy at different distances.
Optimal edge angles for different combat purposes — cutting, piercing, slashing — with material specifications for each type.
Incendiary weapons using natural chemicals — petroleum, resin, sulphur compounds — documented 2,000 years before Greek fire.
Kalaripayattu — rooted in Dhanurveda — is the oldest surviving martial art system in the world, originating in Kerala. It encompasses strikes, kicks, grappling, weaponry (sticks, swords, spears), and pressure point manipulation (Marma therapy). Modern martial arts historians trace the lineage of Chinese Kung Fu, Japanese Karate, and Korean Taekwondo back to Indian monks who carried these techniques along the Silk Road.
107 vital pressure points (Marma) mapped on the human body — used both for healing in Ayurveda and as lethal strike targets in combat.
Kalaripayattu's rigorous body conditioning (Meyppayattu) influenced yoga, gymnastics, and modern sports science.
Wootz Steel, produced in India from 300 BC to 1700 CE, was the finest steel in the ancient and medieval world — exported globally as "Damascus Steel" and prized by armies from Rome to Japan. It had a distinctive wavy pattern and was renowned for holding a razor-sharp edge that modern steel cannot match at the same hardness level.
In 2006, scientists at Dresden University examined samples using electron microscopes and discovered that Wootz Steel contains carbon nanotubes and cementite nanowires — a nanostructured composite material. This microstructure, created by Indian smiths 2,300 years ago using charcoal, iron ore, and plant-based catalysts, has never been fully replicated by modern industry.
Discover Gandharvaveda (music science) and Sthapatyaveda (architecture) next.