enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of asanas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_asanas

    The asanas have been given a variety of English names by competing schools of yoga. [2] The traditional number of asanas is the symbolic 84, but different texts identify different selections, sometimes listing their names without describing them. [3] [a] Some names have been given to different asanas over the centuries, and some asanas have ...

  3. Postures of Bikram Yoga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postures_of_Bikram_Yoga

    The postures include 24 asanas (poses in modern yoga as exercise), one pranayama breathing exercise, and one shatkarma, a purification making use of forced breathing. Bikram Yoga was devised by Bikram Choudhury around 1971 when he moved to America.

  4. Kukkutasana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kukkutasana

    The name comes from the Sanskrit words kukkuṭā meaning "cockerel" [5] and asana (आसन) meaning "posture" or "seat". [6]Kukkutasana is described in medieval hatha yoga texts including the 7th century Ahirbudhnya Saṃhitā, [7] the 13th century Vasishtha Samhita, [8] the 15th century Haṭha Yoga Pradīpikā 1.23, the 17th century Gheraṇḍa Saṃhitā 2.31, and the Bahr al-hayat c. 1602.

  5. Virabhadrasana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virabhadrasana

    Pose like Virabhadrasana III, variant with arms out to sides, Niels Bukh's Primary Gymnastics, 1924. The name is from the Sanskrit वीरभद्र Vīrabhadra, a mythical warrior, and आसन āsana, a yoga posture or meditation seat. [1] Accordingly the asana is often called "Warrior Pose" in English. [2]

  6. Tree pose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_Pose

    In Bikram Yoga, Tree pose (which it calls "Tadasana") has one leg folded in half lotus and the hands together over the chest in prayer position. It is followed by bending the straight leg into a squatting position (called Toe Stand or "Padangushtasana" in Bikram Yoga) with the heel raised and the thigh resting on the calf and heel, the other ...

  7. Chakrasana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chakrasana

    The pose is often chosen by yoga practitioners who wish to advertise themselves: the Welsh author Holly Williams, writing about the commercialisation of yoga in The Independent, commented that she had "unfollowed [several] people on Instagram whose artful shots of their Lycra-clad one-legged wheel poses come with a barrage of hashtags (#fitspo ...

  8. 2,100 Asanas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2,100_Asanas

    Yoga Journal reviewed the book. It reported Lacerda as saying that he had catalogued 8.4 million yoga poses mentioned in Hatha Yoga Pradipika , and that they had been revealed to him in a dream. He stated that 2,100 Asanas was the first edition, and that he was working on a second edition, to be called 50,000 Asanas .

  9. Astavakrasana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astavakrasana

    The pose was unknown in hatha yoga until the 20th century Light on Yoga, but the pose appears in the 1896 Vyayama Dipika, a manual of gymnastics, so Norman Sjoman suggests that it was one of the poses adopted into modern yoga in Mysore by Krishnamacharya. The pose would then have been taken up by his pupils Pattabhi Jois and B. K. S. Iyengar. [4]