enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sacred waters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_waters

    At sunrise along the Ganges, pilgrims descend the ghat steps to drink of the waters, bathe themselves in the waters and perform ablutions where they submerge their entire bodies. These practitioners desire to imbibe and surround themselves with the Ganges’s waters so that they can be purified. [ 13 ]

  3. Allahabad Fort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allahabad_Fort

    The Allahabad Fort was constructed by the Mughal Emperor Akbar in 1583. Abu'l-Fazl, in his Akbarnama writes: [2]. For a long time [Akbar's] desire was to found a great city in the town of Piyag [Prayag], where the rivers Ganges and Jamna join, and which is regarded by the people of India with much reverence, and which is a place of pilgrimage for the ascetics of that country, and to build a ...

  4. Prayag Kumbh Mela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayag_Kumbh_Mela

    For example, the colonial era Imperial Gazetteer of India reported that between 2 and 2.5 million pilgrims attended the Kumbh mela in 1796 and 1808, then added these numbers may be exaggerations. Between 1892 and 1908, in an era of major famines, cholera and plague epidemics in British India, the pilgrimage dropped to between 300,000 and ...

  5. Hindu pilgrimage sites in India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Hindu_pilgrimage_sites_in_India

    Kedarnath Temple in Himalayan Mountains, Uttarakhand Evening prayers at Ganga river (Har-Ki-Pauri) in Haridwar. In Hinduism, the yatra (pilgrimage) to the tirthas (sacred places) has special significance for earning the punya (spiritual merit) needed to attain the moksha (salvation) by performing the darśana (viewing of deity), the parikrama (circumambulation), the yajna (sacrificial fire ...

  6. Millions start bathing in holy rivers at India's biggest ...

    www.aol.com/india-races-prepare-worlds-largest...

    About 400 million pilgrims are expected to attend the 45-day spectacle, which is so large it can be seen from space. In photos: World's biggest religious festival begins in India WATCH: Sea of ...

  7. Kumbh Mela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumbh_Mela

    For example, the colonial era Imperial Gazetteer of India reported that between 2 and 2.5 million pilgrims attended the Kumbh Mela in 1796 and 1808, then added these numbers may be exaggerations. Between 1892 and 1908, in an era of major famines, cholera and plague epidemics in British India, the pilgrimage dropped to between 300,000 and 400,000.

  8. Varanasi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varanasi

    Varanasi is located at an elevation of 80.71 metres (264.8 ft) [77] in the centre of the Ganges valley of North India, in the Eastern part of the state of Uttar Pradesh, along the left crescent-shaped bank of the Ganges, averaging between 15 metres (50 ft) and 21 metres (70 ft) above the river. [78] The city is the headquarters of Varanasi district

  9. Gangasagar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gangasagar

    Every year on the day of Makar Sankranti (14 January), hundreds of thousands of Hindus gather to take a holy dip at the confluence of river Ganges and Bay of Bengal and offer prayers in the Kapila Temple. [3] The Gangasagar Mela and pilgrimage is held annually on Sagar Island's southern tip, where the Ganges enters the Bay of Bengal. [12]