The Śankha-Likhita Smriti – 24/31

📘Twin Pillars of Dharma in Law, Conduct, and Daily Life


🧭 Introduction: Dharma Spoken in Two Voices

The Śankha-Likhita Smriti is one of the oldest and most authoritative Smritis in the Dharmaśāstra tradition. Uniquely authored by two sages — Śankha and Likhita, who were brothers — this text offers a balanced and realistic portrayal of Dharma, combining legal procedure, ritual purity, social ethics, and the importance of repentance.

Though parts of this Smriti are lost or scattered, the surviving fragments are frequently quoted in commentaries, Nibandhas, and Smriti digests, especially in the Mitākṣarā, Dharmakośa, and Yājñavalkya Tīkā.

🪔 “Dharma is not weakened by time; it is renewed by those who uphold it — like Śankha and Likhita.”


👤 Who Were Śankha and Likhita?

  • Śankha and Likhita were brothers, both respected sages in the lineage of Dharma teachers.
  • Their Smriti is a dialogue-based legal and ethical code, composed in concise sutra style.
  • Their story is symbolic of law, forgiveness, and dharmic justice:
    • Likhita once unknowingly ate fruit from Śankha’s āśrama without permission.
    • Śankha insisted that he go to the king and face punishment.
    • The king cut off Likhita’s hand, but later restored it through divine grace.
    • This episode demonstrates the importance of accepting justice and the power of penance.

⚖️ “Let the law prevail over love, and let forgiveness follow justice.” – Śankha


📖 Structure and Surviving Themes

While no full version survives today, around 500+ verses attributed to Śankha-Likhita are preserved through citations. They cover:

CategoryFocus Areas
Ritual purityŚauca (cleanliness), food rules, contamination
Social conductBehavior, speech, hospitality, service
Criminal and civil lawTheft, violence, debt, testimony
Penance (Prāyaścitta)Atonement for sins and errors
Women and family lawMarriage rules, inheritance, honor of women
King and state dutiesFair judgment, justice system, taxation

This makes it one of the most practical, balanced, and socially aware Smritis.


📜 Sanskrit Verse with Transliteration and Meaning

न व्यतिक्रम्य धर्मं यः सत्यं चानुव्रजत्यसौ।
शङ्खलिखितवद्भ्रातुः स धर्मज्ञः स वै द्विजः॥

na vyatikramya dharmaṁ yaḥ satyaṁ cānu vrajat y asau।
śaṅkha-likhita-vad bhrātuḥ sa dharma-jñaḥ sa vai dvijaḥ॥

“He who does not violate dharma and follows truth, like the brothers Śankha and Likhita, is truly a knower of dharma and a true twice-born.”

🕯️ This verse upholds Dharma above relationships — not to divide, but to purify all.


🔍 Core Teachings of Śankha-Likhita Smriti

🔹 1. Importance of Ritual and Internal Purity

  • Daily bath, clean clothes, and avoidance of impure substances emphasized.
  • Interaction with those in mourning or of opposing conduct must be followed by purification.
  • Mental purity (śuddhi) is valued equally with physical purity.

🔹 2. Crime, Punishment, and Law

  • Lists various crimes:
    • Theft
    • Lying under oath
    • Adultery
    • Violence against cows or Brahmins
  • Punishments are proportionate:
    • Designed not for revenge, but social correction and moral evolution
  • Even Brahmins are not exempt from justice — no one is above dharma.

🔹 3. Atonement (Prāyaścitta)

  • Unique in its emphasis on personal responsibility:
    • Even unintentional sins require atonement.
    • Repetition of sins brings harsher penance.
  • Penance includes:
    • Fasting
    • Scriptural study
    • Pilgrimage
    • Service to the poor

This reflects a vision of reform, not condemnation.


🔹 4. Respect for Women and Household Dharma

  • Highlights the honor and restraint expected in male-female interactions.
  • Praises the householder’s role as central to preserving Vedic society.
  • Recommends:
    • Respecting elders
    • Teaching dharma to children
    • Offering hospitality to guests and saints

🔹 5. Ideal King and Governance

  • The king is to act as a servant of Dharma, not a despot.
  • Duties include:
    • Just taxation
    • Protection of dharma and dharmic people
    • Patronage of temples and Vedic scholars

🌍 Relevance in Modern Life

Śankha-Likhita’s TeachingModern Reflection
Law above personal preferenceEquality before law
Ritual and moral purityClean habits, inner clarity
Atonement and correctionTherapy, service, conscious repentance
Household life as dharmic serviceSpiritualizing marriage, parenting
Kingship as serviceEthical leadership in politics and business

Action Plan:

  • Reflect: Are your actions dharmic, even when tested by relationships?
  • Cultivate daily śauca: Clean body, clean thoughts.
  • Identify one past wrong and create a self-defined atonement (daana, seva, silence).
  • Be a just leader—in your home, work, or community.

🔚 Conclusion

The Śankha-Likhita Smriti is a moral compass disguised as a legal manual. It shows us that Dharma is not inflexible law, but a living path—sometimes demanding justice, sometimes urging forgiveness, always focused on inner truth.

🕉️ “Between love and law lies Dharma — the path that uplifts all.”

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