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  2. Bansberia Kumbh Mela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bansberia_Kumbh_Mela

    Bansberia Kumbh Mela, also known as Bansberia Tribeni Sangam Kumbha Mela, is a mela, or religious gathering, associated with Hinduism and held at the town Bansberia, West Bengal, India, at the Triveni Sangam, the confluence of the Hooghly, Saraswati, and the Jamuna river.

  3. Sangam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangam

    Legendary Tamil Sangams, legendary assemblies of Tamil scholars and poets in the remote past First Sangam; Second Sangam; Third Sangam; Sangam literature, a collection of Tamil literature and the earliest period of South Indian history, when the Tamil Sangams were held; Sangama dynasty, the first dynasty of the Vijayanagara Empire (c. 1336–1485)

  4. Bengali mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengali_mythology

    Bengali mythology in a literal sense has been a derivative of Vedic mythology. It can refer to the historical legends and folk tales of West Bengal and Bangladesh . Given the historical Hindu and Buddhist presence in the region, characters from Vedic and Hindu mythology are present within Bengali literature.

  5. Sangam literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangam_literature

    South India in Sangam Period. In Old Tamil language, the term Tamilakam (Tamiḻakam, Purananuru 168. 18) referred to the whole of the ancient Tamil-speaking area, [web 1] corresponding roughly to the area known as southern India today, consisting of the territories of the present-day Indian states of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, parts of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka.

  6. Prayagraj - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayagraj

    Today, Triveni Sangam (or simply Sangam) is a more frequently used name for the confluence. Prayagraj ( Sanskrit : Prayāgarāja ), meaning "the king among the five prayāgas ", is used as a term of respect to indicate that this confluence is the most splendid one of the five sacred confluencies in India.

  7. Shyama Sangeet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shyama_Sangeet

    Shyama Sangeet (Bengali: শ্যামা সঙ্গীত) is a genre of Bengali devotional songs dedicated to the Hindu goddess Shyama or Kali which is a form of supreme universal mother-goddess Durga or parvati. It is also known as Shaktagiti or Durgastuti.

  8. Vande Mataram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vande_Mataram

    Vande Mātaram (Devanagari: वंदे मातरम् Bengali: বন্দে মাতরম্‌ Bônde Mātôrôm; transl. I praise you, Motherland) is a poem that was adopted as the national song of the Republic of India in 1950.

  9. Mangal-Kāvya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangal-Kāvya

    Mangal-Kāvya (Bengali: মঙ্গলকাব্য; lit. "Poems of Benediction") is a group of Bengali religious texts, composed more or less between 13th and 18th centuries, notably consisting of narratives of indigenous deities of rural Bengal in the social scenario of the Middle Ages.