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  2. List of Nakshatras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nakshatras

    Each Nakshatra is also divided into quarters or padas of 3°20’, and the below table lists the appropriate starting sound to name the child. The 27 nakshatras, each with 4 padas, give 108, which is the number of beads in a Japa mala, indicating all the elements (ansh) of Vishnu:

  3. Hindu astrology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_astrology

    Jyotisha, states Monier-Williams, is rooted in the word Jyotish, which means light, such as that of the sun or the moon or a heavenly body. The term Jyotisha includes the study of astronomy , astrology, and the science of timekeeping using the movements of astronomical bodies.

  4. Garga-samhita (Garga and Bharadvaja) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garga-samhita_(Garga_and...

    Untitled: longitudes of the chief star in the nakshatra; Untitled; Untitled: Maximum latitudes in minutes for various planets; Chāyā-vidhāna: several topics usually dealt with a chapter titled Tri-praśnā-dhyāya in other astronomical texts. For example, raidus of the great circle, longitude of the sun, equinoctial noon hypotenuse etc.

  5. Nakshatra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakshatra

    Nakshatra (Sanskrit: नक्षत्रम्, romanized: Nakṣatram) is the term for Lunar mansion in Hindu astrology and Buddhist astrology. A nakshatra is one of 27 (sometimes also 28) sectors along the ecliptic. Their names are related to a prominent star or asterisms in or near the respective sectors.

  6. Gargiya-jyotisha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gargiya-jyotisha

    Gargiya-jyotisha is the oldest extant text of the Indian astrology (jyotiḥśāstra), [1] composed around 25 CE. [2]Mahabharata 13.18.25–26 (Anushasana Parva) refers to the 64 divisions of a work of Garga, a description identical to given in the second chapter of the Garga-jyotisha.

  7. Jyotiḥśāstra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jyotiḥśāstra

    A jyotiḥśāstra (treatise on jyotisha) is a text from a classical body of literature on the topic of Hindu astrology, known as Jyotiṣa, dating to the medieval period of Classical Sanskrit literature (roughly the 3rd to 9th centuries CE).

  8. Bhrigu Samhita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhrigu_Samhita

    Bhrigu as per the Bhrigu Stotram. The Bhṛgu Saṃhitā is a Saṃskṛta astrological treatise attributed in its introduction to Bhrigu, one of the "Saptarshis" ("seven sages") of the Vedic period.

  9. Lagna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagna

    In Vedic Astrology Jyotiṣa, the Lagna (lagñ) or Hour Marker, is the first moment of contact between the soul and its new life on earth in Jyotiṣa. [1] Lagna's Rashi and Nakshatra represents the "Atman" (Soul) of an Individual Person while the Lagna Lord which represents the Ruler of the Horoscope absorbs the traits and qualities of that specific Rashi & Nakshatra.