Vasiṣṭha
c. 1400 BCE · Ayodhyā
Legendary Vedic seer; no historical dates exist. The conventional placement (~1400 BCE) merely ties him to the Rigvedic family books, where the seventh maṇḍala is traditionally ascribed to his lineage. Historicity is uncertain and the year is a stratum-based convention, not a biographical fact.
Vasiṣṭha is one of the legendary Saptarṣi (seven seers) of Hindu tradition and the seer to whom the seventh book (Mandala 7) of the Rigveda is ascribed. In the epics he appears as the family priest (purohita) of the Ikṣvāku (solar) dynasty — serving kings such as Daśaratha and acting as preceptor to Rāma — and as the long-standing rival of the sage Vishvamitra. His life and deeds are known only through scripture and legend, not historical record; the date and place associated with him are traditional rather than documented.
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Ayodhyā
We know they were here, but the specifics of what they did at this stop aren’t recorded yet in our corpus.
About Ayodhyā
Ayodhyā, in modern Uttar Pradesh, India, was known in antiquity as Sāketa. According to the tradition recorded in later sources, the Buddhist poet Aśvaghoṣa — author of the Buddhacarita, an epic life of the Buddha — was born at Sāketa around the late first or early second century CE.
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Vasiṣṭha’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Egyptian world
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.