Exploring the Beneficiaries:
A Gendered Peep into
the Institution of Niyoga
in Early India*
Smita Sahgal
Department of History, Lady Shri Ram College, University of Delhi, Delhi, India
Abstract
In patriarchal societies around the world the absence of a male issue has been regarded
a serious social aberration. Alternatives have been worked out to surmount the prob-
lem. Early Indian literature apprises us of one such option; niyoga or levirate wherein
a widow or the wife of an impotent man was temporarily made to cohabit with a
designated man in order to procure a son who would be regarded as the son of his
mother’s legal husband. It clearly came within the fold of apaddharam or the law of
exigency, something that could be resorted to only in the time of emergency. There
seems to be a divergence of views in the narrative tradition and normative [shastriya]
literature on the issue of its genesis and purpose. But what comes out clearly is that
niyoga was hailed as a ‘strategy of heirship’.
The article intends to look at the trajectory of the practice in ancient and early
medieval India from the vantage of principal female actors. A host of queries would be
taken up. It would be worth dwelling upon the issue of its sustainability and popular-
ity; whether the practice of niyoga was designed to benefit a particular section of the
society or was meant for larger social good. Did the practice of niyoga bring women
some solace or turned out to be an exploitative way of controlling their sexuality? Did
the woman have the right to reject it or enter in out of their volition? How did men
negotiate this practice? Did it bruise their masculinity or repair, at least in some cases?
Did the practice also have caste and class angles to it? Can we detect divergence in the
views of Brahman theoreticians and members of other castes such as kshatriyas for
whom its practical application amounted to a survival tactic? Who eventually stood
to gain from the practice and its eventual fading away? What was the legal and social
status of the daughter born of such unions? We shall take up these issues for analysis
in the article.
Article
Indian Historical Review
39(2) 163–198
© 2012 ICHR
SAGE Publications
Los Angeles, London,
New Delhi, Singapore,
Washington DC
DOI: 10.1177/0376983612461415
http://ihr.sagepub.com
*This article is a part of the research project titled, Niyoga: Commissioned Procreation and Sexual Regulation
in Early India [A Socio-Historical Study in North India between 1500 BCE and 700 CE] funded by the
ICHR. The responsibility of facts stated or opinion expressed is entirely of the author and not of the ICHR.
at Uni of Southern Queensland on March 15, 2015 ihr.sagepub.com Downloaded from