Classical Languages of India: Interactive Map and Complete Study Guide

Study all 11 classical languages of India through an interactive political map covering primary language regions, recognition dates, language families, scripts, major literary works and the five languages added in 2024. Includes detailed revision cards and quizzes for UPSC, State PCS, SSC, UGC-NET, school and university examinations.

IASNOVA Interactive Atlas · Geography Through Maps

CLASSICAL LANGUAGES OF INDIA

11 languages recognised by the Government of India — explore speech regions, literary heritage, scripts and recognition dates.

Complete India political map with state and Union Territory borders, labelled primary speech territories for eight Classical Languages, and a separate panel for Sanskrit, Pali and Prakrit. IASNOVA.COMIASNOVA.COMIASNOVA.COM

Pan-Indian & Historical Classical Languages

Hover or tap a name to read its description.

Dravidian familyIndo-Aryan familyGold ring: added in 2024Panel: no single modern speech territory

Map labels show primary modern speech territories, not exclusive linguistic boundaries. Sanskrit, Pali and Prakrit are placed separately to avoid false territorial precision.

How to read the classical languages map

India currently has 11 languages with Classical Language status. Eight are shown beside their principal modern speech territories. Sanskrit, Pali and Prakrit are listed in a separate panel because their literary and historical geography extends far beyond one present-day state.

The colour of each marker shows its language family. A gold ring identifies one of the five languages added in 2024. Hover or tap a marker, map label or panel name to open a study card.

11Classical languages
5Added in 2024
4Dravidian languages
7Indo-Aryan languages

Recognition timeline

RecognitionLanguageFamilyPrimary association
12 Oct 2004TamilDravidianTamil Nadu and Puducherry
25 Nov 2005SanskritOld Indo-AryanPan-Indian literary tradition
31 Oct 2008TeluguDravidianAndhra Pradesh and Telangana
31 Oct 2008KannadaDravidianKarnataka
8 Aug 2013MalayalamDravidianKerala
1 Mar 2014OdiaIndo-AryanOdisha
3 Oct 2024MarathiIndo-AryanMaharashtra
3 Oct 2024PaliMiddle Indo-AryanBuddhist literary tradition
3 Oct 2024PrakritMiddle Indo-AryanMultiple historical regions
3 Oct 2024AssameseIndo-AryanAssam
3 Oct 2024BengaliIndo-AryanWest Bengal

Government criteria revised in 2024

1. High antiquity

Early texts or recorded history extending over roughly 1,500–2,000 years.

2. Heritage literature

A body of ancient literature or texts valued as heritage by generations of speakers.

3. Knowledge evidence

Prose and knowledge texts in addition to poetry, epigraphical and inscriptional evidence.

4. Classical–modern distinction

The classical language and literature may differ from the modern form or be discontinuous with later offshoots.

Complete reference cards

Quick revision quiz

1. Which was the first language declared Classical by the Government of India?

2. Which group contains all five languages added in 2024?

3. Which two languages received Classical status on the same date in 2008?

4. The Tipitaka is most directly associated with which Classical Language?

5. Which Classical Language name represents a group of Middle Indo-Aryan literary languages?

6. Which set contains the four Dravidian Classical Languages?

7. Which evidence was explicitly emphasised in the 2024 revised criteria?

Frequently asked questions

How many Classical Languages does India have?

India has 11 Classical Languages. The total rose from six to eleven when five languages were added on 3 October 2024.

Which language was recognised first?

Tamil was the first, recognised on 12 October 2004. Sanskrit followed on 25 November 2005.

Which languages were added in 2024?

Marathi, Pali, Prakrit, Assamese and Bengali.

Is Classical Language status the same as inclusion in the Eighth Schedule?

No. Classical status recognises antiquity and literary heritage under separate government criteria. The Eighth Schedule is a constitutional list of recognised languages.

Why are Sanskrit, Pali and Prakrit not pinned to one state?

Their literary and historical geographies span many regions and periods. Assigning each to one present-day state would be misleading.

Official sources

Map note: state and Union Territory borders provide political reference. Language areas are indicative educational associations, not legal boundaries or claims of linguistic exclusivity. Information checked against Government of India sources current to July 2026.

IASNOVA.COM · Geography Through Maps ★
Share this post:
IAS NOVA Editorial Team
IAS NOVA Editorial Team
Articles: 699

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.