Vedi (altar)


Vedi is the term for "sacrificial altar" in the Vedic religion. Such altars were an elevated outdoor enclosure, generally strewed with Kusha grass, and having receptacles for the sacrificial fire; it was of various shapes, but usually narrow in the middle.
They were used in various types of Yajna rituals, of which the lengthiest was the agnicayana, lasting twelve days. In Vedic times, offerings, often including animals, were burnt in the fire, and fully consumed by it. This contrasts with modern Hindu offerings to gods, which are all vegetable, and are preserved to be consumed by the devotees.
Fire altars remain part of the rituals in some Hindu festivals and rites of passage; in particular circling around a sacred fire remains an essential part of Hindu weddings.
Although Agni, the Vedic god of fire, has an important place in the mandala setting out the plan in Hindu temple architecture, in the south-east part of the temple, fire altars are not now a normal part of regular Hindu temple rituals. Modern fire sacrifices are covered at Homa rituals.

Types

As deduced from descriptions in ancient texts, the types of vedi were:
The uttaravedi was in the shape of a falcon, and was piled up with bricks in the Agnicayana ritual.
Vedic altars are described in the circum-Vedic texts dealing with Kalpa, notably the Satapatha Brahmana, and the Sulbasutras say that the Rigveda corresponds to an altar of mantras.
Fire altars are already mentioned in the Rigveda. According to Taittiriya Samhita 5.2.3., they are made of twenty-one bricks.
In ŚBM 10.4.3.14-20, the altar is made of 396 yajusmati bricks, and of 10,800 lokamprna bricks. 10,701 lokamprna bricks belong to the ahavaniya altar, 78 to the dhisnya hearths and 21 to the garhapatya. Around the altar are 360 parisrita stones.
ŚBM 10.3.1. describes that the altar is symbolically built with gayatri, usnih, pankti, tristubh, jagati and generative breath. The gayatri altar's height is to the knees, the tristubh's to the navel and the jagati's to a man's height.

Agnicayana

LayerNumber of yajusmati bricks in SB
5138
447
371
241
198

In the Agnicayana ritual, the mahavedi has a length of 24 prakrama in the east, 30 in the west and 36 in the north and south. Inside the mahavedi, an altar is placed. In the smaller ritual space to the west of the mahavedi, three altars are placed: the garhapatya, ahavaniya and daksinagni. The round garhapatya and the square ahavaniya have the same area. The Squaring the circle problem was also investigated because of such ritualistic considerations. The ahavaniya altar has five layers, representing earth, space and the sky.

Archaeology

At Kalibangan the remains of what some writers claim to be fire altars have been unearthed. S.R. Rao found similar "fire altars" in Lothal which he thinks could have served no other purpose than a ritualistic one.