Ancient veena


The ancient veena is an early Indian arched harp, not to be confused with the modern Indian veena which is a type of lute. The instrument is attested on a gold coin of the Gupta Empire from the mid-300s CE.

Generic meaning of veena

The Sanskrit word veena which is attested already in the Rigveda has designated in the course of Indian history a variety of instruments of various types, as it is a generic term for all kinds of string instruments, just as the Tamil word yazh. In the last centuries and today the instruments designated under the designation veena of which there are several kinds, have tended to be mostly instruments of the lute or cithar type, and recently the word was even applied to modified Western guitars. But the early veenas could be plucked string instruments of any type.

Early Gupta vina

One of early veenas used in India from early times, until the Gupta period and later was an instrument of the type of the harp and more precisely of the. It was played with the strings being kept parallel to the body of the player, with both hands plucking the strings, as shown on Samudragupta's gold coins It is not possible to tell exactly the number of strings of the instrument on the coin, but descriptions in early literary sources of an ancient instrument called the saptatantree veenaa seem to coincide generally with the type of instrument represented on the coin. In the Nāṭyaśāstra this 7-string veena is called a citra.
The depiction of king Samudragupta holding such an instrument on his gold coins testifies of the popularity of the instrument, and also of the interest in music and the arts of a king who was also one of the greatest military conquerors in Indian history.

Descendants

From India this type of instrument was introduced at an early period into Burma where, while instruments of this type have disappeared from India itself, it is still played, generally with 15 strings, under the name of saung.