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The seven days of the week of the Hindu calendar also corresponds with the seven classical planets and related day names of European culture and are named accordingly in most languages of the Indian subcontinent. Most Hindu temples around the world have a designated place dedicated to the worship of the navagraha.
There is a similar cluster of Navagraha temples in Chennai, erstwhile Thondai Nadu in and around Kundrathur.. Agatheeswarar Temple - Suryan - Kolapakkkam; Somanaadheeswarar Temple - Chandran - Somangalam
The temples have six daily rituals at various times from 5:30 a.m. to 9 p.m., and two yearly festivals on its calendar. The temples are maintained and administered by the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Department of the Government of Tamil Nadu.
The Tattva-saṃgraha is a text written by the 8th century Indian Buddhist pandit Śāntarakṣita.The text belongs to the 'tenets' (Siddhanta, Tib.sgrub-mtha) genre and is an encyclopedic survey of Buddhist and non-Buddhist philosophical systems in the 8th century.
Shani is the root for name for the day Saturday in many other Indian languages. In modern Hindi , Odia , Telugu , Bengali , Marathi , Urdu , Kannada and Gujarati , Saturday is called Shanivaar ; Tamil : Sani kizhamai ; Malayalam : Shaniyazhcha ; Thai : Wạn s̄eār̒ (วันเสาร์).
Graha-siddhi; Tithi-siddhi; Graha-chalana; Ganita-dipika; Jataka-paddhati, also known as Keshava-paddhati; Brhat-keshavi is an enlarged version of this text Apparently a condensed version of Shripati's JKP: it is an extremely concise text containing only 42 verses, and was very popular as a handbook on mathematical calculations essential for ...
Garga-samhita (IAST: Garga-saṃhitā), is an Indian Sanskrit-language text on jyotisha (ancient Indian astrology and astronomy), written as a dialogue between the sages Bharadvaja and Garga. Although attributed to Garga, it was definitely not composed by the ancient astrologer of that name, and can be dated to 6th-7th century CE.
Karnataka Shuddha Saveri's notes when shifted using Graha bhedam, yields 1 popular pentatonic rāgam, Amritavarshini. Graha bhedam is the step taken in keeping the relative note frequencies same, while shifting the shadjam to the next note in the rāgam. For more details and illustration of this concept refer Graha bhedam on Amritavarshini.