Patañjali (Sanskrit: पतञ्जलि) was a sage in Ancient India, thought to be the author of a number of Sanskrit works

The greatest of these are the Yoga Sutras, a classical yoga text

There is doubt as to whether the sage Patañjali is the author of all the works attributed to him as there are a number of known historical authors of the same name

A great deal of scholarship has been devoted over the last century to the issue of the historicity or identity of this author or these authors

Amongst the more important authors called Patañjali are: The author of the Mahābhāṣya, an ancient treatise on Sanskrit grammar and linguistics, based on the Aṣṭādhyāyī of Pāṇini

This Patañjali’s life is dated to mid 2nd century BCE by both Western and Indian scholars

This text was titled as a bhashya or “commentary” on Kātyāyana-Pāṇini’s work by Patanjali, but is so revered in the Indian traditions that it is widely known simply as Mahā-bhasya or “Great commentary”

As per Ganesh Sripad Huparikar, actually, Patanjali (2nd century BCE), the forerunner among ancient grammatical commentators, “adopted an etymological and dialectical method of explaining in the whole of his ‘Mahābhāshya’ (Great Commentary), and this has assumed, in the later commentary literature the definite form of ‘Khanda-anvaya’

” So vigorous, well reasoned and vast is his text, that this Patanjali has been the authority as the last grammarian of classical Sanskrit for 2,000 years, with Pāṇini and Kātyāyana preceding him

Their ideas on structure, grammar and philosophy of language have also influenced scholars of other Indian religions such as Buddhism and Jainism

The compiler of the Yoga sūtras, a text on Yoga theory and practice, and a notable scholar of Samkhya school of Hindu philosophy

He is variously estimated to have lived between 2nd century BCE to 4th century CE, with more scholars accepting dates between 2nd and 4th century CE

The Yogasutras is one of the most important texts in the Indian tradition and the foundation of classical Yoga

It is the Indian Yoga text that was most translated in its medieval era into forty Indian languages

The author of a medical text called Patanjalatantra

He is cited and this text is quoted in many medieval health sciences-related texts, and Patanjali is called a medical authority in a number of Sanskrit texts such as Yogaratnakara, Yogaratnasamuccaya and Padarthavijnana

There is a fourth Hindu scholar also named Patanjali, who likely lived in 8th-century CE and wrote a commentary on Charaka Samhita and this text is called Carakavarttika

According to some modern era Indian scholars such as P

V

Sharma, the two medical scholars named Patanjali may be the same person, but completely different person from the Patanjali who wrote the Sanskrit grammar classic Mahābhashya

Patanjali is one of the 18 siddhars in the Tamil siddha (Shaiva) tradition

Patanjali continues to be honoured with invocations and shrines in some forms of modern postural yoga, such as Iyengar Yoga and Ashtānga Vinyāsa Yoga