One of early veenas used in India from early times, until the Gupta period and later (this is probably the instrument referred to as
veenaa in a chapter of the
Nāṭyaśāstra dealing with instrumental music) was an instrument of the type of the
harp and more precisely of the
arched harp. 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 (7-string veenaa) seem to coincide generally with the type of instrument represented on the coin. In the Nāṭyaśāstra this 7-string veena (played with the fingers, as opposed to the 9-string vipanchi played with a plectrum) 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==