Product Description
The Seed of Indra — Guardian of the Gut
Seed | Traditionally Harvested & Naturally Dried
Holarrhena pubescens (syn. H. antidysenterica) | Apocynaceae
इन्द्रयव • Indrayava • Bhadrayava • Kalinga • Vatsabija
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Attribute |
Details |
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Sanskrit Name |
इन्द्रयव (Indrayava) • भद्रयव (Bhadrayava) • कालिङ्ग (Kalinga) |
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Botanical Name |
Holarrhena pubescens (syn. H. antidysenterica) |
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Plant Family |
Apocynaceae (Kutaja Kula) |
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Part Used |
Seed │ The seed of the Kutaja tree |
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Ayurvedic Category |
संग्राही (Sangrahi) • अर्शोघ्न (Arshoghna) • कण्डूघ्न (Kandughna) • स्तन्यशोधन (Stanyashodhana) |
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Taste (Rasa) |
Tikta (Bitter) • Kashaya (Astringent) |
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Quality (Guna) |
Laghu (Light) • Ruksha (Dry) |
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Potency (Virya) |
Sheeta (Cooling) |
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Post-Digestive Effect |
Katu (Pungent) |
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Dosha Action |
Kapha-Pitta Shamaka |
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Origin |
Deciduous Forests of Bharat — Traditionally Harvested |
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Shelf Life |
24 months from date of processing |
The Herb
Begin with the name, because the name is the whole matter.
Indra — the king of the gods. Yava — barley. Indrayava: the barley of Indra. The seed is shaped like a grain of barley, and the classical writers, seeing it, reached for the highest name available to them.
This is the seed of the Kutaja tree. Where you read Indrayava in an Ayurvedic text, the Kutaja seed is meant — this equivalence is fixed across the literature, and any seller who treats them as separate dravyas has not read the texts.
The distinction that does matter is between the seed and the bark. Both are used. They are not the same. The bark is Kutaja twak — the substance of Kutaja Ksheerapaka, the classical milk decoction. The seed is Indrayava — a distinct dravya with its own classical name, its own placements, its own dose.
ASLI AYURVEDA supplies the seed, and says so.
Charaka placed Indrayava within four groups: Arshoghna, Kandughna, Stanyashodhana, and Asthapanopaga. Its actions are Sangrahi — retentive, binding — and Tikta-Kashaya in rasa with Sheeta virya. It cools, and it holds. Where the passage runs loose and hot, this seed is what classical Ayurveda reached for.
The texts call Kutaja the single finest dravya for atisara and pravahika. Not among the finest. The finest.
ASLI AYURVEDA offers Indrayava in its most authentic form — the whole dried seed, carefully harvested, preserved without additives or artificial enhancement.
This is not a general wellness herb.
This is a specific and formidable dravya, and it should be used as one.
What the Ancient Texts Say
Charaka Samhita
Charaka places Kutaja and its seed across four classifications:
Arshoghna — the group addressing haemorrhoidal disorder
Kandughna — the group addressing itching
Stanyashodhana — the group that purifies breast milk
Asthapanopaga — the group adjunct to Asthapana Basti
The classical literature records Kutaja as pre-eminent in atisara — the loose and disordered passage — and in dysenteric conditions with mucus and blood.
Sushruta Samhita
Sushruta records Kutaja seed and bark pounded together with honey, with Ativisha added, administered in pittatisara — the Pitta-dominant variety of atisara.
Bhavaprakasha Nighantu
Bhavamishra records Indrayava as Sangrahi (retentive), astringent in taste, cooling in potency, and pacifying to all three doshas. He records the synonyms Kutajabija, Yava, Indrayava, Kalinga, and Bhadrayava together, establishing that these names denote one seed.
The Male and Female Kutaja — A Distinction Sellers Ignore
Dalhana, commenting upon Sushruta, distinguishes two varieties.
The male — larger fruit, white flowers, smooth leaves — identified with Holarrhena antidysenterica. Its seed is the bitter Indrayava, kadava.
The female — smaller fruit-stalks, darker flowers — identified with Wrightia tinctoria or W. tomentosa. Its seed is the sweet Indrayava, mitha, and is properly Bhadrayava.
The market sells both. The two are frequently substituted for one another. ASLI AYURVEDA supplies the bitter Indrayava — the seed of Holarrhena pubescens. We name the species and we name the controversy, because a house that does not know a botanical dispute exists is a house that will one day ship the wrong seed.
Rasapanchaka
Tikta and Kashaya rasa; Laghu and Ruksha guna; Sheeta virya; Katu vipaka; Kapha-Pitta Shamaka karma.
Ayurvedic Classical Understanding
Across Ayurvedic literature and traditional practice, Indrayava is associated with:
Sangrahi — the retentive, binding action
Atisara and Pravahika — traditional applications in disordered passage
Arshoghna — traditional haemorrhoidal application
Kandughna — relief of itching
Krimighna — traditional anti-parasitic action
Stanyashodhana — purification of breast milk
Kapha and Pitta pacification through bitter-astringent rasa and cooling potency
Traditional skin and kushtha applications
Its enduring place within Ayurveda reflects a tradition that knew precisely which dravya to reach for, and did not reach for it casually.
Benefits
Ayurvedic Benefits
Traditionally revered as a foremost Sangrahi dravya — retentive and binding in action
Placed by Charaka within four classifications: Arshoghna, Kandughna, Stanyashodhana, and Asthapanopaga
Classically recorded as pre-eminent among dravyas for atisara
Traditionally attributed Krimighna — anti-parasitic action
Recorded by Bhavamishra as pacifying to all three doshas
Cooling and drying — the classical configuration for a heated, loosened passage
A principal ingredient of Kutajarishta and Kutajavaleha
Wellness Benefits
May support comfortable and regular digestive passage
Traditionally associated with settling an unsettled gut
May support the natural balance of the intestinal environment
Traditionally linked with skin comfort and relief from itching
May support digestive wellness during seasonal transition
Traditionally associated with cooling an over-heated constitution
Ritual Wellness Benefits
Named for Indra himself — the barley of the king of the gods
Traditionally reserved for specific need rather than daily routine
Supports Ayurveda's understanding that the most powerful dravyas are used most sparingly
Historically valued in monsoon and post-monsoon regimens
How to Use Your Indrayava
Indrayava Kwatha — The Classical Decoction
Simmer 10 grams of Indrayava seed in 240 ml of water over a low flame, reducing to approximately 60 ml.
Strain and consume warm. Traditionally taken in divided doses.
Traditional Powder Preparation
Freshly grind dried Indrayava seed into a fine powder. Classical dosage is 3–6 grams per day in divided doses — this is the maximum. Consume with warm water according to constitutional suitability and practitioner guidance.
Classical Formulations
Indrayava is a principal ingredient of Kutajarishta, Kutajavaleha, Brihat Gangadhara Churna, and Palashabijadi Churna — preparations of long classical standing.
A Word on Restraint
This is not Guduchi. This is not Haritaki. Indrayava is a specific dravya of considerable potency, classically deployed for a defined purpose and then set down. Ayurveda did not take it daily, and neither should you.
Do not exceed 3–6 grams per day. Do not use for extended periods without practitioner guidance. Do not use where the passage is bound rather than loose — the Sangrahi action will worsen it.
Seasonal Wisdom
Monsoon (Varsha Ritu): Traditionally the season of greatest relevance, when digestive disturbance is most common.
Post-Monsoon (Sharada Ritu): Traditionally valued during Pitta-balancing regimens.
Summer (Grishma Ritu): The Sheeta virya is well suited to heat.
Winter (Hemanta & Shishira): Used sparingly. Cooling and drying dravyas do not serve a cold, dry season.
Purity & Sourcing
ASLI AYURVEDA's Indrayava is harvested from Holarrhena pubescens across the deciduous forests of Bharat.
We supply the bitter Indrayava — the seed of the male Kutaja. The sweet Indrayava, the seed of Wrightia tinctoria, is a different dravya and is not offered under this name. The two are routinely interchanged in trade; we identify our material rather than accept a collector's assurance.
We supply seed only. Kutaja bark is a distinct dravya with distinct applications — the substance of Kutaja Ksheerapaka — and is not a substitute for the seed.
The seed is naturally dried and preserved without chemical fumigation, synthetic enhancement, or artificial colouring.
Processing takes place within our Z Gold Certified Greenroom Infrastructure — a spiritually aligned Ayurvedic wellness sanctum where Vedic chants resonate continuously, preserving the atmosphere and sanctity of classical herbal preparation.
No additives.
No preservatives.
No synthetic enhancement.
No compromise with authenticity.
What you receive is Indrayava in the honest form Charaka and Sushruta knew — bitter, cooling, and precise.
This is the Power of Pure.




