India's medical tradition โ Ayurveda โ is among the oldest systematic medical systems in the world.
15 ScholarsAtreya Punarvasu is the legendary physician-teacher of the Atreya school of Ayurveda โ the tradition that produced the Charaka Samhita. He taught in Taxila (modern Pakistan), then the greatest centre of learning in the ancient world, and his six main disciples โ Agnivesha, Bhela, Jatukarna, Parashara, Harita, and Ksharapani โ each composed medical texts.
Only Agnivesha's text survived intact (later revised by Charaka as the Charaka Samhita). Atreya is depicted in the Charaka Samhita as a Socratic teacher who responds to students' questions with comprehensive explanations, establishing the dialogue-teaching method as foundational to Ayurvedic medical education.
Atreya's theoretical contributions: (1) Tridosha theory as the foundational explanatory framework for health and disease; (2) The eight branches of Ayurveda (ashtanga); (3) The principle that diet is the first medicine; (4) Classification of diseases by doshic origin; (5) The concept of bala (immunity/strength) as the body's natural defence; (6) Rasayana (rejuvenation) as a systematic approach to health maintenance. These principles remain the core of Ayurvedic theoretical medicine.
The Atreya school's tridosha framework is the basis of all modern Ayurvedic clinical practice. Research at NIA Jaipur, AIIMS and international Ayurveda research centres tests Atreya school formulations. The Charaka Samhita that preserves his teaching is the foundation of BAMS (Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery) education across India's 250+ Ayurvedic colleges.
Jivaka Komarabhacca is the most celebrated physician in Buddhist literature โ the personal physician of the Buddha, of King Bimbisara of Magadha, and later of King Ajatashatru. His name Komarabhacca (trained in Komarabhritya โ pediatrics) indicates his specialisation in children's medicine, while the legends surrounding him describe remarkable surgical feats.
He trained for seven years at Taxila under the great teacher Atreya (a different Atreya from the internal medicine school). The Buddhist Vinaya Pitaka (monastic rules) contains the most detailed account of his life and cases โ describing cranial surgery, abdominal surgery and treatment of King Bimbisara's fistula in such detail that they constitute the earliest case histories in Indian medical literature.
Jivaka's documented cases: (1) Cranial surgery โ removing a blood clot from a patient's head (described as trepanation in modern terms); (2) Abdominal surgery โ treating a patient's intestinal obstruction through surgery; (3) Treatment of King Bimbisara's anal fistula; (4) Treatment of a merchant's severe headache through a medicated oil procedure; (5) Pediatric medicine (komarabhritya) for the young. His willingness to perform surgery (usually avoided by Brahmin physicians due to caste restrictions) shows that his Buddhist context removed ritual pollution concerns from surgical practice.
Jivaka is venerated in Thailand, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Cambodia as the patron deity of traditional medicine โ his cult is a living tradition. The Jivaka Society in Thailand promotes traditional medicine in his name. His case histories are studied in medical anthropology and history of surgery. His Buddhist medical ethics (universal care regardless of caste or wealth) is studied in bioethics as an early example of universal healthcare philosophy.
Vagbhata is the third great classical Ayurvedic author (after Charaka and Sushruta) and the one who synthesised both traditions into a single unified system. His Ashtanga Hridayam (Heart of the Eight Branches) and Ashtanga Sangraha together constitute the Laghu Trayi (Lesser Triad) of Ayurvedic texts โ essential companions to the Brihat Trayi (Greater Triad) of Charaka, Sushruta and Kashyapa.
Born in Sindh (modern Pakistan) into a family with Buddhist connections (his grandfather Simhagupta was a Buddhist physician), Vagbhata synthesised Charaka's internal medicine with Sushruta's surgery and added his own clinical observations and theoretical refinements, producing the most practically useful single-volume synthesis in classical Ayurveda.
Vagbhata's synthesis achievements: (1) Combined the Charaka school's theoretical framework (tridosha, pathology, internal medicine) with the Sushruta school's surgical and pharmaceutical knowledge into one integrated system; (2) Added dinacharyฤ (daily routine) and ritucharya (seasonal routine) as systematic health maintenance protocols; (3) Systematised the eight clinical assessment criteria (ashtasthana pariksha): pulse, urine, faeces, tongue, sound, eyes, general appearance, skin; (4) Clear, memorable verse format making the text easier to memorise and teach.
The Ashtanga Hridayam is the foundational clinical text in all Indian Ayurveda colleges. Modern translations by K.M. Sreekumar, A.M. Mooss and P.V. Sharma are widely used. Research publications regularly test Vagbhata's clinical recommendations against modern pharmacological and clinical evidence. His dinacharya (daily health routine) recommendations are used in preventive health programmes.
Dhanvantari is the divine physician of the Vedic tradition โ the god of Ayurveda, physician of the devas, and the mythological origin of medical knowledge in India. He is said to have emerged from the Samudra Manthan (churning of the cosmic ocean) holding the pot of amrita (nectar of immortality), representing medicine as the supreme gift to humanity.
Historically, a king named Divodasa Dhanvantari of Kashi (Varanasi) is credited with teaching Sushruta and the six disciples who are mentioned in the Sushruta Samhita as Dhanvantari's students. He thus represents the historical founder of the surgical school of Ayurveda and the divine legitimation of medical knowledge as a whole. Dhanvantari Jayanti (Dhanteras) is celebrated annually as the national Ayurveda Day.
Dhanvantari's significance is both mythological and practical: (1) Divine legitimation: by attributing medical knowledge to a god, the tradition asserts that healing is sacred, the physician is sacred, and medical knowledge has cosmic authority; (2) Surgical school foundation: as Sushruta's teacher, Dhanvantari is the source of the surgical tradition including rhinoplasty, cataract surgery and 120 surgical instruments; (3) Pharmacopoeia tradition: the Dhanvantari Nighantu systematises drug knowledge essential to all Ayurvedic practice.
National Ayurveda Day (Dhanvantari Jayanti) is celebrated with conferences, health camps and public awareness programmes across India. The National Medicinal Plants Board and AYUSH Ministry programmes are often launched on this day. The Dhanvantari Award is the Government of India's highest award for contributions to Ayurveda. His divine status gives medicine cultural and religious authority in India.
Madhava is the author of the Madhava Nidana (Rugviniscaya) โ the most important diagnostic and pathological text in classical Ayurveda, systematically classifying all diseases by their doshic origin, symptom pattern, prognosis and complications. The text filled a crucial gap in the classical triad: Charaka focused on internal medicine therapeutics, Sushruta on surgery โ neither had systematically organised pathological diagnosis.
The Madhava Nidana became the standard diagnostic reference for all subsequent Ayurvedic physicians. Its methodical disease classification influenced all later Ayurvedic diagnostic writing and remains required reading in BAMS education today.
Madhava Nidana's diagnostic framework: (1) Classification of 69 disease categories by doshic dominance; (2) Nidana (aetiology), samprapti (pathogenesis), purvarupa (premonitory signs), rupa (manifest signs), and upadrava (complications) โ the five-element diagnostic framework applied to every disease; (3) Specific prognosis criteria; (4) Integration of Charaka and Sushruta diagnostic criteria into one system. This comprehensive schema gave Ayurvedic physicians a diagnostic roadmap for the first time.
The Madhava Nidana is required reading in all BAMS programmes. Modern Ayurvedic research regularly uses Madhava's diagnostic categories as the framework for clinical research. The CCRAS (Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences) publishes research using Madhava Nidana disease categories. The five-element diagnostic framework continues to structure Ayurvedic clinical assessment.
Bhela is one of the six principal disciples of Atreya Punarvasu โ the Taxila physician-teacher โ and the author of the Bhela Samhita, one of the six original Atreya-school medical texts. While most of the other five texts were lost or absorbed into the Charaka Samhita revision, fragments of the Bhela Samhita survive in a single incomplete manuscript preserved in Mysore.
The Bhela Samhita is of exceptional scholarly importance because it preserves an independent version of the Atreya school's teachings, allowing comparison with the Charaka Samhita to reconstruct the original Atreya teaching before Charaka's revision. In some passages, Bhela preserves older or different versions of key Ayurvedic theories.
Bhela Samhita's significance: (1) Independent evidence for Atreya school teaching โ comparison with Charaka Samhita reveals which elements are original Atreya doctrine vs Charaka's revisions; (2) Some passages preserve older or divergent theories โ for instance, Bhela's account of fetal development differs from Charaka's in ways suggesting an older tradition; (3) Unique formulations for some diseases; (4) Different drug classifications in some categories. The Bhela Samhita is the only surviving alternative to the Charaka Samhita for the internal medicine tradition.
The Bhela Samhita has been edited and translated by the Central Council for Research in Ayurveda and Siddha (CCRAS). Scholarly comparison of Bhela and Charaka is ongoing โ researchers at AIIMS, BHU and Pune University have published studies. It represents a rare alternative textual witness for the reconstruction of early Ayurvedic theory.
Kashyapa (Vriddhajivaka) is the author of the Kashyapa Samhita (also called Vriddhajivakiya Tantra) โ the foundational text of Kaumara Bhritya (pediatric medicine) in Ayurveda, covering the medical care of infants, children and pregnant women. The text is incomplete (significant portions are lost) but remains the primary classical source for Ayurvedic pediatrics.
The Kashyapa Samhita is unusual in Ayurveda for its extensive treatment of obstetrics (garbhini paricharya โ prenatal care), neonatology (newborn care protocols) and developmental pediatrics (child development milestones), making it a uniquely comprehensive mother-and-child health text in the ancient world.
Kashyapa Samhita's pediatric contributions: (1) Garbhini paricharya โ month-by-month prenatal care protocols including diet, herbs and lifestyle; (2) Neonatal care โ newborn assessment, feeding protocols, hygiene; (3) Childhood immunisation: Suvarnaprashan โ administration of gold and herbs to infants to enhance immunity and intelligence; (4) Childhood diseases classified by age of onset; (5) Child development milestones โ systematic description of motor, cognitive and social development benchmarks. These constitute a comprehensive pediatric system 1,500 years before modern pediatrics.
Suvarnaprashan (gold bhasma administered to infants) is an active practice in modern Ayurveda and is being researched for immunological effects. CCRAS has funded Suvarnaprashan clinical trials. The Kashyapa Samhita's developmental milestones are compared with WHO child development standards in research publications. Month-by-month prenatal care recommendations are used in integrative obstetrics.
Vrinda is the author of the Siddha Yoga (Vrinda Madhava) โ one of the most practically oriented and widely used medical compendiums in medieval Ayurveda. The text organises treatments disease by disease, providing specific formulations for each condition in a format designed for direct clinical use by practising physicians.
The Siddha Yoga's practical orientation โ it gives specific drug formulations with dosages rather than theoretical discussions โ made it an essential companion text for physicians who needed quick clinical reference rather than theoretical study. It influenced numerous later Ayurvedic compendiums that adopted its disease-by-disease format.
Vrinda's clinical contributions: (1) Disease-by-disease organisation providing direct clinical reference โ a format that later became standard in Ayurvedic compendiums; (2) Integration of Charaka, Sushruta and Vagbhata formulations with additional clinical experience; (3) Focus on practicable, accessible treatments using locally available herbs; (4) Specific dosage guidelines for different patient types; (5) Disease classification that influenced the Sharngadhara Samhita and other medieval compendiums.
The Vrinda Madhava / Siddha Yoga is studied in Ayurvedic history and is used in research comparing classical formulations with modern pharmacological findings. Several of its formulations have been validated pharmacologically. The disease-by-disease format it pioneered continues in modern Ayurvedic practice guides.
Sharngadhara is the author of the Sharngadhara Samhita โ the most important medieval Ayurvedic pharmacological text and one of the three texts of the Laghu Trayi (Lesser Triad). His text introduced several significant advances not found in the classical Brihat Trayi: pulse diagnosis (nadi pariksha), urine examination (mutra pariksha), and a systematic pharmacopoeia of compound formulations (including medicated wines, decoctions, pills, powders and oils).
His introduction of pulse diagnosis as a formal diagnostic method was particularly revolutionary โ while later tradition attributes pulse diagnosis's origin to an ancient tradition, Sharngadhara's 13th-century formulation established it as a systematic clinical tool.
Sharngadhara Samhita's innovations: (1) Pulse diagnosis (nadi pariksha) โ systematic reading of the radial pulse at three depths corresponding to Vata, Pitta and Kapha; (2) Urine examination (mutra pariksha) โ including the famous til oil drop test for urine examination; (3) Systematic classification of compound formulations by preparation method: decoctions (kwatha), pills (gutika), powders (churna), medicated oils (taila), medicated ghee (ghrita), medicated wines (asava/arishta); (4) Dosage guidelines by age, season and constitution.
Sharngadhara Samhita is a required text in all BAMS programmes. His pulse diagnosis system is practised by Ayurvedic physicians and is being studied for physiological correlates with modern pulse oximetry and blood pressure monitoring. Research on Ayurvedic compound formulations (polyherbal) regularly uses his classification as the framework. Several of his compound formulations are licensed Ayurvedic drugs sold by major companies.
Bhavamishra is the author of the Bhavaprakasha โ the most encyclopaedic and practically comprehensive Ayurvedic text of the medieval period, written during the Mughal era. His text uniquely incorporates knowledge of syphilis (phirangaroga โ 'foreign disease', brought to India by Portuguese traders) and other newly encountered diseases, showing that Ayurveda was capable of incorporating new clinical knowledge.
The Bhavaprakasha is structured differently from earlier Ayurvedic texts โ it includes a detailed Nighantu (drug dictionary) as its first section, making it a combined pharmacopoeia and clinical medicine text. The Nighantu section, known as Bhavaprakasha Nighantu, is still a standard drug reference for Ayurvedic practitioners.
Bhavaprakasha's innovations: (1) Incorporation of syphilis (phirangaroga) โ evidence that Ayurveda could absorb newly encountered diseases from foreign contact; (2) Updated pharmacopoeia including drugs introduced from Islamic medicine (Yunani) and from Portuguese traders; (3) Comprehensive Nighantu making the text a single-volume reference for both drugs and diseases; (4) Clear, systematic clinical chapters for all major diseases; (5) Updated dietary guidelines incorporating new foods (tomato, potato, chilli were not in earlier Ayurvedic texts โ Bhavamishra's era saw their introduction).
The Bhavaprakasha Nighantu is a standard textbook in BAMS pharmacognosy. Its drug descriptions are used in ethnobotanical research to identify plants used in Ayurveda. The AYUSH Ministry references it in official Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia standards. Modern translations by K.M. Bhishagratna, G. Puri and K.R. Krishnamurthy are widely used.
Chakrapanidatta is the greatest commentator in Ayurvedic literature โ author of the Ayurveda Dipika, the definitive commentary on the Charaka Samhita, without which many passages of the Charaka Samhita are nearly unintelligible. He was also the author of the Chakradatta (Chikitsa Sangraha) โ a widely used clinical compendium that became the most referenced clinical handbook in medieval India.
Working in Bengal under the Pala dynasty, Chakrapanidatta represents the peak of the Indian commentary tradition applied to medicine: his Ayurveda Dipika is not merely explanatory but adds original clinical observations, resolves contradictions between passages, and updates Charaka's terminology to reflect medieval medical knowledge.
Chakrapanidatta's contributions: (1) Ayurveda Dipika resolved centuries of accumulated ambiguity in Charaka's text โ making the classical teaching accessible to medieval practitioners; (2) Chakradatta's clinical formulations are based on classical sources but updated for medieval pharmacological knowledge; (3) His commentary integrated Buddhist medical knowledge (from Bengal's Buddhist scholarly tradition) with Hindu Ayurveda; (4) He systematised Charaka's fragmentary discussions of pulse, urine and other diagnostic methods.
The Ayurveda Dipika is an essential companion to all scholarly Charaka Samhita study. The Chakradatta is still used by traditional Ayurvedic physicians. Modern critical editions of the Charaka Samhita (by P.V. Sharma, R.K. Sharma) rely heavily on Chakrapanidatta's commentary for textual emendation. His clinical formulations are studied for pharmacological validation.
Sodhala is the author of the Gadanigraha โ a comprehensive Ayurvedic clinical compendium covering all major diseases with specific treatments, written in verse for memorisation. He is also attributed with the Sodhala Nighantu โ a drug dictionary that supplements the classical pharmacopoeias.
Sodhala's significance is primarily as a systematiser and transmitter: his Gadanigraha synthesised the existing clinical literature in a format suitable for teaching and clinical use, and was widely copied across South Asia. His work represents the mature phase of Ayurvedic clinical compendium literature.
Sodhala's contributions: (1) Gadanigraha's verse format made clinical knowledge more memorisable and teachable; (2) Integration of regional drug names and equivalences โ essential for practitioners working across different linguistic regions of India; (3) Coverage of diseases not adequately treated in earlier compendia; (4) Systematic organisation facilitating quick clinical reference; (5) Evidence of regional medical traditions being absorbed into mainstream Ayurvedic literature.
The Gadanigraha is studied in history of Ayurveda and used in manuscript research projects. Regional drug name equivalences he provides are used in ethnobotanical identification of Ayurvedic plants. CCRAS manuscript documentation projects have catalogued Gadanigraha manuscripts across India.
Trimalla Bhatta is the author of the Yoga Ratnakara โ one of the most widely used Ayurvedic clinical compendia of the 16thโ17th century, especially popular in South India and Maharashtra. The text synthesises formulations from all earlier Ayurvedic sources and adds new clinical experience, with particular strength in toxicology (visha chikitsa) and external medicine.
The Yoga Ratnakara's popularity across different regions of India โ it was translated into several regional languages โ made it one of the most widely distributed Ayurvedic clinical texts before the modern period. Its clear, accessible format and comprehensive coverage made it the practitioner's handbook of choice across South Asia.
Yoga Ratnakara's contributions: (1) Most comprehensive toxicology section in any Ayurvedic compendium โ covering snakebite, scorpion sting, spider venom, plant poisons and mineral toxins with specific antidotes; (2) Integration of regional South Indian medical traditions with classical Ayurveda; (3) Clear, accessible verse format widely memorised by traditional vaidyas; (4) New formulations incorporating drugs introduced from Portuguese and Islamic medical contact; (5) Practical guidance on drug preparation and quality testing.
The Yoga Ratnakara is used in BAMS toxicology courses and is referenced in research on Ayurvedic management of snakebite. Ethnobotanical research on South Indian medicinal plants uses its drug descriptions. The CSIR-IICT in Hyderabad and regional Ayurvedic research centres study its formulations.
Dalhana is the author of the Nibandhasangraha โ the definitive commentary on the Sushruta Samhita, without which many surgical passages would be unintelligible to later readers. Just as Chakrapanidatta made the Charaka Samhita fully accessible through the Ayurveda Dipika, Dalhana made the Sushruta Samhita โ with its highly technical surgical descriptions โ accessible to medieval and subsequent practitioners.
Dalhana is also important for his role in textual transmission: his commentary preserves multiple manuscript variants and resolves contradictions in the Sushruta text, making him an important figure in both the history of surgery and the history of textual scholarship.
Dalhana's contributions: (1) Made Sushruta's technical surgical descriptions accessible โ his explanations of surgical instruments and procedures are often clearer than the original text; (2) Preserved important manuscript variants that allow reconstruction of the Sushruta text's transmission history; (3) Added clinical context to theoretical passages โ explaining when and how surgical principles should be applied; (4) Integrated post-Sushruta developments in surgery and pharmacology; (5) His commentary is essential for identifying Sushruta's instruments with modern surgical tools.
All modern scholarly translations of the Sushruta Samhita use Dalhana's Nibandhasangraha as the primary interpretive guide. History of surgery research on Sushruta's procedures uses Dalhana's explanations to identify ancient instruments with modern equivalents. Meulenbeld's History of Indian Medical Literature (the definitive modern reference) gives Dalhana extensive treatment.
The physician-alchemist Nagarjuna represents the tradition that fused Ayurvedic medicine with Rasa Shastra (pharmaceutical alchemy) โ the systematic use of metals and minerals as medicines. His Arogyamanjari and the Rasa Vaisheshika attributed to his tradition systematise the use of mercury, gold, silver and other metals in Ayurvedic treatment.
This tradition holds that appropriately processed metals become more bioavailable and more potent than herbal medicines alone โ and that the combination of mineral and herbal medicines (rasa-aushadha) represents the highest level of Ayurvedic pharmacology. Modern research on Rasa Shastra formulations has demonstrated nanoparticle formation during traditional processing, providing a scientific basis for the claimed enhanced bioavailability.
Nagarjuna's pharmaceutical contributions in medicine: (1) Systematic integration of Rasa Shastra (mineral pharmacy) into Ayurvedic clinical practice; (2) Classification of rasa-aushadha (mineral-herbal medicines) by therapeutic indication; (3) Quality control criteria for bhasma preparation โ specific tests for purity and potency; (4) Guidelines for combining Rasa Shastra preparations with herbal formulations; (5) Ayurvedic toxicology โ specific treatments for metal and mineral poisoning.
Rasa Shastra bhasma formulations are actively researched for antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory activity. AYUSH-funded research centres conduct bhasma safety and efficacy studies. The question of heavy metal safety in Rasa Shastra formulations is an active regulatory debate โ balancing traditional use with modern safety standards.