Seven Hundred Shlokas · Seven Hundred Lights
Each dot is one shloka. Gold = Tier-S (importance 8–10). Hover to highlight.
The Bhagavad Gita's 700 verses are traditionally divided into three books of six chapters each — corresponding to the three great paths of yoga and the three essential questions of human existence.
| Ch | Name / Yoga | Verses |
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The number 700 is not incidental. The Mahabharata's war poem Bhishma Parva — of which the Gita forms chapters 25–42 — uses the Gita's 700 shlokas as a precise, intentional unit. Scholars such as B. G. Tilak observed that this count reflects a complete, self-sufficient teaching: every question Arjuna raises in chapter 1 receives its full answer across the arc of all 700 verses, with chapter 18 mirroring chapter 1 in structure and theme.
"The Gita is not a random collection — it is a poem composed with architectural precision. Its 700 shlokas form a wheel: the crisis at the start, the crescendo at chapter 11, the return to duty at the end. No verse is accidental. No count is arbitrary."
The anustubh metre — the default metre of the Gita — packages each shloka into 32 syllables across four quarter-verses (padas) of 8 syllables each. 700 shlokas means 22,400 syllables. This is the precise oral weight a student was expected to memorise in the traditional gurukula setting — a curriculum unit, not merely a philosophical one.
Some editions count 701 (treating verse 13.0 as a separate introductory verse); others count 700. The traditional count — and the one used across all major commentaries from Adi Shankaracharya to Swami Vivekananda — is 700.
Of the 700 verses, 15 are classified Tier-S — the verses most commonly memorised, most frequently quoted, and considered most essential to understanding the Gita's teaching.