enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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.

  3. Historical Vedic religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_Vedic_religion

    The Hindu rites of cremation are seen since the Rigvedic period; while they are attested from early times in the Cemetery H culture, there is a late Rigvedic reference invoking forefathers "both cremated (agnidagdhá-) and uncremated (ánagnidagdha-)". (RV 10.15.14)

  4. Vedas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedas

    The texts considered "Vedic" in the sense of "corollaries of the Vedas" are less clearly defined, and may include numerous post-Vedic texts such as the later Upanishads and the Sutra literature, such as Shrauta Sutras and Gryha Sutras, which are smriti texts. Together, the Vedas and these Sutras form part of the Vedic Sanskrit corpus.

  5. History of Hinduism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Hinduism

    The historical Vedic religion, also known as Vedicism and Vedism, sometimes referred to as an early phase of Hinduism called Vedic Hinduism and Ancient Hinduism, [d] was the sacrificial religion of the early Indo-Aryans, speakers of early Old Indic dialects, ultimately deriving from the Proto-Indo-Iranian peoples of the Bronze Age who lived on ...

  6. History of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_India

    Many of the concepts of Indian philosophy espoused later, like dharma, trace their roots to Vedic antecedents. [53] Early Vedic society is described in the Rigveda, the oldest Vedic text, believed to have been compiled during the 2nd millennium BCE, [54] [55] in the north-western region of the Indian subcontinent. [56]

  7. Upanishads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upanishads

    The Upanishads (/ ʊ ˈ p ʌ n ɪ ʃ ə d z /; [1] Sanskrit: उपनिषद्, IAST: Upaniṣad, pronounced [ˈʊpɐnɪʂɐd]) are late Vedic and post-Vedic Sanskrit texts that "document the transition from the archaic ritualism of the Veda into new religious ideas and institutions" [2] and the emergence of the central religious concepts of Hinduism.

  8. Janapada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janapada

    The Vedic period reaches from the late Bronze Age into the Iron Age: from about 1500 BCE to the 6th century BCE. With the rise of sixteen Mahajanapadas ("great janapadas"), most of the states were annexed by more powerful neighbours, although some remained independent.

  9. Rigveda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigveda

    The codification of the Rigveda took place late in the Rigvedic or rather in the early post-Rigvedic period at c. 1200 BCE, by members of the early Kuru tribe, when the center of Vedic culture moved east from the Punjab into what is now Uttar Pradesh. [52]