enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Vedic Heritage Portal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedic_Heritage_Portal

    Vedic Heritage Portal is an Indian government project initiated at IGNCA, under the Ministry of Culture (India). It provides a portal to communicate messages enshrined in the Vedas and preserve Vedic heritage. [ 1 ]

  3. Vedic period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedic_period

    The Vedic period, or the Vedic age (c. 1500 – c. 500 BCE), is the period in the late Bronze Age and early Iron Age of the history of India when the Vedic literature, including the Vedas (c. 1500 –900 BCE), was composed in the northern Indian subcontinent, between the end of the urban Indus Valley Civilisation and a second urbanisation, which began in the central Indo-Gangetic Plain c. 600 BCE.

  4. Hinduism in South India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinduism_in_South_India

    Hinduism in South India refers to the Hindu culture of the people of South India. Hinduism in South India is characterized by Dravidian customs and traditions, hence it is also called Dravidian Hinduism. The Dravidians made great contributions to the development of Hinduism. [1] South India was the birthplace of many Hindu saints and reformers.

  5. Historical Vedic religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_Vedic_religion

    The historical Vedic religion, also called Vedicism or Vedism, and sometimes ancient Hinduism or Vedic Hinduism, [a] constituted the religious ideas and practices prevalent amongst some of the Indo-Aryan peoples of the northwest Indian subcontinent (Punjab and the western Ganges plain) during the Vedic period (c. 1500–500 BCE).

  6. History of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_India

    The Vedic culture is described in the texts of Vedas, still sacred to Hindus, which were orally composed and transmitted in Vedic Sanskrit. The Vedas are some of the oldest extant texts in India. [51] The Vedic period, lasting from about 1500 to 500 BCE, [52] [53] contributed to the foundations of several cultural aspects of the Indian ...

  7. Vedic Parishad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedic_Parishad

    Vedic Parishad or Parishad ( Sanskrit: परिषद ) was a council of learned Brahmins and scholars in the ancient India. It is also known as Brahmasabhā. The Vedic Parishad was headed by a chief judge. The chief judge was called as Dharmādhikārin. It was often a kind of religious court in Vedic and Brahmanical period. [1]

  8. Greater Magadha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Magadha

    Out of the ideological opposition between these two cultural spheres – the Vedic realms of Kuru and Panchala in the west, and Śramaṇa of Greater Magadha in the east – developed the two main religious & spiritual ideologies of Ancient India. Vedic religion, which placed a lot of importance on the system of ritual correctness, arose out of ...

  9. List of Hindu deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hindu_deities

    The number 33 comes from the number of Vedic gods explained by Yajnavalkya in Brhadaranyaka Upanishad – the eight Vasus, the eleven Rudras, the twelve Adityas, Indra and Prajapati. (Chapter I, hymn 9, verse 2) . They are: 8-Vasu, 11-Rudra, and 12-Aaditya, 1-Indra and 1-Prajaapati. Brown, Joe David, ed. (1961). India.