Vedic priesthood
Priests of the Vedic religion are officiants of the yajna service. Yajna is an important part of Hinduism, especially the Vedas. Persons trained for the ritual and proficient in its practice were called . As members of a social class, they were generically known as vipra 'sage' or kavi 'seer'. Specialization of roles attended the elaboration and development of the ritual corpus over time. Eventually a full complement of sixteen s became the custom for major ceremonies. The sixteen consisted of four chief priests and their assistants.
Chief priests
The older references uniformly indicate ' as the presiding priest, with perhaps only the adhvaryu as his assistant in the earliest times. The phrase "seven hotars" is found more than once in the Rigveda. Hymn 2.1.2 of Rigveda states it as follows,The above hymn enumerate the priests as the ', ', ', agnīdʰ, ' and adʰvaryu.
Vedic yajnas are typically performed by four priests of the Vedic priesthood: the hota, the adhvaryu, the udgata and the Brahma. The functions associated with the priests were:
- The Hotri recites invocations and litanies drawn from the Rigveda.These invocations could consist of single verses, strophes, or entire hymns. Hota uses three Rig verses, the introductory verse, the accompanying verse and benediction as the third.
- The Adhvaryu is the priest's assistant and is in charge of the physical details of the ritual like measuring the ground, building the altar explained in the Yajurveda. The adhvaryu offers oblations. Each action was accompanied by supplicative or benedictive formulas, drawn from the yajurveda. Over time, the role of the adhvaryu grew in importance, and many verses of the '
The rgvedic Brahmanas, Aitareya and Kausitaki, specify seven hotrakas to recite shastras : ', brāhmanācchamsin, maitrāvaruna, ', ', agnīdh and acchāvāka. They also carry a legend to explain the origin of the offices of the subrahmanya and the grāvastut.
Purohita
The requirements of the fully developed ritual were rigorous enough that only professional priests could perform them adequately. Thus, whereas in the earliest times, the true sacrificer, or intended beneficiary of the rite, might have been a direct participant, in Vedic times he was only a sponsor, the yajamāna, with the ' or brahman taking his stead in the ritual. In this seconding lay the origins of the growing importance of the purohita. It was not unusual for a purohita to be the ' or brahman at a sacrifice for his master, besides conducting other more domestic rituals for him also. In latter days, with the disappearance of Vedic ritual practice, purohita has become a generic term for "priest".Assistants
In the systematic expositions of the shrauta sutras, which date to the fifth or sixth century BCE, the assistants are classified into four groups associated with each of the four chief priests, although the classifications are artificial and in some cases incorrect:- With the ':
- *the maitrāvaruna
- *the acchāvāka
- *the grāvastut
- With the ':
- *the '
- *the '
- *the subrahmanya
- With the adhvaryu:
- *the '
- *the '
- *the
- With the brahman:
- *the brāhmanācchamsin
- *the agnīdh
- *the ''''''
Philological comparisons
In present-day Indian Zoroastrian tradition the word athornan is used to distinguish the priesthood from the laity. These subdivisions, and the terms used to describe them, are relatively recent developments specific to Indian Zoroastrians and although the words themselves are old, the meaning that they came to have for the Parsis are influenced by their centuries-long coexistence with Hinduism. It appears then that the Indian Zoroastrian priests re-adopted the older for its similarity to Hinduism's atharvan, which the Parsi priests then additionally assumed was derived from Avestan ātar 'fire'. This folk etymology may "have been prompted by what is probably a mistaken assumption of the importance of fire in the ancient Indo-Iranian religion".
The division of priestly functions among the Hotar, the Udgatar and the Adhvaryu has been compared to the Celtic priesthood as reported by Strabo, with the Druids as high priests, the Bards doing the chanting and the Vates performing the actual sacrifice.