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The Devi Bhagavatam, also referred to in some traditions as the Devi Bhagavata Purana or Shrimad Devi Bhagavatam, is a Sanskrit scriptural text associated with the broader corpus of Puranic literature within Hinduism. It is generally understood as a devotional and philosophical work centred on the Divine Feminine, often identified with Adi Shakti, Mahadevi or Bhagavati. The text occupies an important place in Shakta traditions, where the Goddess is venerated as the supreme reality, and it is also read and referenced within wider Vaishnava, Shaiva and Smarta contexts.
This draft has been prepared as a cautious starting point for IndiaWiki editors. It deliberately avoids dates of composition, claims of authorship, specific verse counts, manuscript histories, sectarian rankings and other details that require verification against reliable secondary scholarship. Editors are requested to treat this draft as a scaffold rather than a finished article, and to add cited material from peer-reviewed academic sources, recognised reference works on Hindu scripture, and reputable translations. Where traditions differ, the article should present multiple viewpoints neutrally rather than favouring a single sectarian reading. Sensitive theological matters should be described in descriptive rather than prescriptive language.
The Devi Bhagavatam belongs to the genre of Puranas, a class of Sanskrit texts that combine narrative, cosmology, genealogy, ritual instruction and theological discussion. Puranas are traditionally classified in various schemes, and the precise classification of the Devi Bhagavatam within these schemes has been a subject of discussion among traditional commentators and modern scholars. Editors should verify how different classificatory traditions list this text, and should describe such classifications without endorsing any one position as definitive.
The text is generally presented in the form of a dialogue, a common Puranic device in which a sage narrates teachings and stories to a listener or assembly. It blends mythological narratives concerning the Goddess with philosophical discourses, hymns, ritual prescriptions and devotional passages. The work has been transmitted through manuscript traditions across different regions of the subcontinent, and printed editions have been produced by a number of publishing houses in the modern period. Translations into Indian regional languages and into English exist, though their accuracy and completeness vary. Editors are encouraged to consult scholarly catalogues of Sanskrit manuscripts and standard reference works on Puranic literature when describing the textual history.
The Devi Bhagavatam is regarded as a foundational text by many practitioners and scholars of Shakta Hinduism, which centres devotion on the Goddess. Its narratives, hymns and theological discussions have informed temple worship, festival observance, devotional poetry and commentarial literature in several Indian languages. Passages from the text are recited in religious settings, and certain sections are popularly associated with vrata observances and recitation cycles, although the specific practices vary by region and tradition.
The text also engages with broader themes in Hindu thought, including the nature of ultimate reality, the relationship between the divine and the cosmos, the role of devotion (bhakti), the significance of pilgrimage sites associated with the Goddess, and the ethical and ritual responsibilities of devotees. As such, it has been studied not only as a sectarian scripture but also as a source for understanding the historical development of Goddess-centred theology in India. Editors should ensure that significance is described in cultural, devotional and academic terms, with claims about influence or popularity supported by secondary sources rather than asserted in absolute terms.
The following list identifies areas where this draft has intentionally avoided specific claims. Editors should research each topic using reliable sources before adding content to the published article:
For each item above, editors are advised to cite at least one reliable secondary source and to phrase contested matters as differing scholarly or traditional views rather than as settled facts.
A mature IndiaWiki article on the Devi Bhagavatam may benefit from the following section outline, subject to editorial discretion and the availability of sourced material:
This draft is not intended for public publication in its present form. It has been written deliberately to avoid unsupported specific claims, and several areas have been left as scaffolding for editors to fill in with verified material. Editors are requested to observe the following while developing the article:
References to be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: