Definition:
Hindu
law in its current usage refers to the system of personal laws (marriage,
adoption, inheritance, etc.) applied to Hindus, especially in India. Modern
Hindu law is thus a part of the law of India established by the Constitution
of India (1950).
(1) Prior to Indian Independence in 1947, Hindu law formed part of the British
colonial legal system and was formally established as such in 1772 by
Governor-General Warren Hastings who declared in his Plan for the
Administration of Justice that "in all suits regarding inheritance,
marriage, caste and other religious usages or institutions, the laws of the
Koran with respect to the Mohamedans and those of the Shaster with respect to
the Gentoos shall invariably be adhered to."
(2) The substance of Hindu law implemented by the British was derived from
early translations of Sanskrit texts known as Dharmasastra, the treatises (sastra)
on religious and legal duty (dharma). The British, however, mistook the
Dharmasastra as codes of law and failed to recognize that these Sanskrit texts
were not used as statements of positive law until they chose to do so. Rather,
Dharmasastra contains what may be called a jurisprudence, i.e. a theoretical
reflection upon practical law, but not a statement of the law of the land as
such.
(3) Another sense of Hindu law, then, is the legal system described and
imagined in Dharmasastra texts (and described more fully below). One final
definition of Hindu law, or classical Hindu law, brings the realm of legal
practice together with the scholastic tradition of Dharmasastra by defining
Hindu law as a usable label for myriad localized legal systems of classical
and medieval India that were influenced by and in turn influenced the
Dharmasastra tradition. Such local laws never conformed completely to the
ideals of Dharmasastra, but both substantive and procedural laws of the
tradition did impact the practical law, though largely indirectly. It is worth
emphasizing that Sanskrit contains no word that precisely corresponds to law
or religion and that, therefore, the label "Hindu Law" is a modern
convenience used to describe this tradition. This article will briefly review
the Hindu law tradition from its conceptual and practical foundations in early
India (classical Hindu law) through the colonial appropriations of
Dharmasastra (Anglo-Hindu law) to the establishment of the modern personal law
system (modern Hindu law).
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