Atreya orAtreyas (आत्रेय) Rishi, orAtreya Punarvasu, was a descendant ofAtri, one of the greatHindu sages (rishis) whose accomplishments are detailed in thePuranas. Sage Atreya was a renowned scholar ofAyurveda, and a school of early Ayurveda was founded based on his teachings.
Some historians of Ayurveda date Atreya to 6th century BCE, and theorize that he was the personal physician of theGandhara king Nagnajita. The Buddhist textMulasarvastivada-Vinayavastu describes him as the teacher ofJivaka, the personal physician ofthe Buddha, and connects him toTakshashila in Gandhara.[1]
The oldest portions of theBhela Samhita and theCharaka Samhita represent a consolidation of Atreya's teachings.[1] TheBhela Samhita is in form of a dialogue between Atreya and his pupil Bhela.[2] The original contents ofCharaka Samhita are credited to Atreya, which were in turn codified and edited by Agnivesha and Charaka. According to Surendranath Dasgupta, The old Ayurveda of Atreya-Charaka school probably has its root in the now extinctCaranavaidya branch of Atharvaveda.[3]
According to the Charaka tradition, there existed six schools of medicine, founded by the disciples of the sage Punarvasu Ātreya. Each of his disciples, Agnivesha, Bhela, Jatūkarna,Parāshara, Hārīta, and Kshārapāni, composed a Samhitā. Of all the six, the one composed byAgnivesha was most revered. According to Dr. Tustomu Yamashita, the Bhela or Bheda(la)Samhita is often quoted by later authors and commentators of Ayurveda. Some of the manuscripts of Bhela available are the Thanjavur Manuscript - a palm leaf manuscript kept in Maharaja Sarfoji's library in Thanjavur - and East Turkestan Manuscript, only one folio of a paper manuscript, now kept in Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin.[4]
Charaka later on, taking cues from Agnivesa Samhita, produced the now renowned workCharaka Samhita around 300 B.C. which survived and has been handed down to us in the form ofBower Manuscript dated around 4th century. Charaka Samhita is the foundational text ofAyurveda.[citation needed]