Bharat is a coequal name of India, as set down in
Article 1 of the Constitution, adopted in 1950, which states in English: "India, that is Bharat, ..." Bharat, which was predominantly used in Sanskrit, was adopted as a self-ascribed alternative name by some people of the Indian subcontinent and the Republic of India. This realm of Bharat, which has been referred to as in Puranas – after
Emperor Bharata, the son of
Rishabhanatha (Adinatha) the first tirthankar of
Jainism. He is described to be a
Kshatriya born in the
Solar dynasty. This has been mentioned in
Vishnu Purana (2,3,1), Vayu Purana (33,52),
Linga Purana (1,47,23),
Brahmanda Purana (14,5,62),
Agni Purana (107,11–12),
Skanda Purana (37,57) and
Markandeya Purana (50,41), all using the designation . According to vedic texts Bharat is derived from the name of the
Vedic community
Bharatas, who are mentioned in the
Rigveda as one of the original community of the
Āryāvarta and notably participating in the
Battle of the Ten Kings. The designation
Bharat appears in the official Sanskrit name of the country, . The name is derived from the ancient Hindu
Puranas, which refer to the land that comprises India as and uses this term to distinguish it from other s or continents. For example, the
Vayu Purana says "he who conquers the whole of is celebrated as a ". The Sanskrit word is a
vrddhi derivation of , which was originally an epithet of
Agni. The term is a verbal noun of the Sanskrit root , "to bear/to carry", with a literal meaning of to be maintained (of
fire). The
root is cognate with the English verb 'to bear' and Latin . This term also means "one who is engaged in search for knowledge". , the
Esperanto name for India, is also a derivation of . The
Vishnu Purana mentions: {{verse translation|lang1=sa|Uttaraṃ yat samudrasya himādreścaiva dakṣiṇam. varṣaṃ tad bhārataṃ nāma bhāratī yatra santatiḥ. The Bhagavata Purana mentions (Canto 5, Chapter 4) – "He (
Rishabhanatha (Adinatha)) begot a hundred sons that were exactly like him ... He (
Bharata) had the best qualities and it was because of him that this land by the people is called Bhāratavarṣa." Bharata Khanda (or Bhārata Kṣētra) is a term used in some of the
Jain and
Hindu texts. In the Sanskrit epic, the
Mahabharata (200 BCE to 300 CE), a larger region of Indosphere is encompassed by the term Bharat. Some other Puranic passages refer to the same Bhārata people, who are described as the descendants of
Dushyanta's son
Bharata in the
Mahabharata. The use of Bharat often has political overtones, appealing to a certain cultural conception of India. In 2023,
President Droupadi Murmu and
Prime Minister Narendra Modi used the Bharat name in connection with a
G20 gathering, which caused speculation on a name-change for the country. Such a change would need a constitutional amendment, meaning two-thirds of the vote in each of the two houses of parliament, and an official notice to the UN, advising how to write the name in the UN's
six official languages.
Epigraphical references The earliest recorded use of Bhārata-varṣa () in a geographical sense is in the
Hathigumpha inscription of King
Kharavela (first century BCE), where it applies only to a restrained area of northern India, namely the part of the
Ganges west of
Magadha. The inscription clearly mentions Bharat was named after
Bharata, the son of first
Jain tirthankara
Rishabhanatha. == Hindustan / Hind ==