Jaimini Bharata: The Forbidden Retelling of the Great Epic The Mahabharata, composed by Maharshi Krishna Dvaipayana Vyasa, is traditionally described as being taught to five disciples, each of whom produced his own recension of the epic. The Adi Parva records this transmission directly. Vyasa is said to have compiled the Vedas and then taught the fifth Veda, the Mahabharata, to Sumantu, Jaimini, Paila, his own son Shuka, and to his disciple Vaishampayana, publishing the Bharata Samhita through each of them separately. Of these five versions, only Vaishampayana's recital, narrated at Janamejaya's snake sacrifice and transmitted further by Ugrashrava Sauti, survives in complete form. This is the Mahabharata known to the world today. Jaimini, also celebrated as the author of the Purva Mimamsa philosophical school, composed his own version, of which only his Ashvamedha Parva exists in full, narrated by Jaimini himself to Janamejaya. The remaining sections are considered lost, th...