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

    For example, the name Muktasana is now given to a variant of Siddhasana with one foot in front of the other, but has also been used for Siddhasana and other cross-legged meditation poses. [6] As another example, the headstand is now known by the 20th century name Shirshasana, but an older name for the pose is Kapalasana.

  3. Siddhasana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siddhasana

    The names Muktasana (Sanskrit: मुक्तासन, Liberated Pose) and Burmese position are sometimes given to the same pose, sometimes to an easier variant, Ardha Siddhasana. Svastikasana has each foot tucked as snugly as possible into the fold of the opposite knee.

  4. Meditative postures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meditative_postures

    Siddhasana is an ancient meditation seat.. Meditative postures or meditation seats are the body positions or asanas, usually sitting but also sometimes standing or reclining, used to facilitate meditation.

  5. Asana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asana

    For example, in Britain in the 1970s, women formed between 70 and 90 percent of most yoga classes, as well as most of the yoga teachers. It has been suggested that yoga was seen as a support for women in the face of male-dominated medicine, offering an alternative approach for chronic medical conditions, as well as to beauty and ageing, and it ...

  6. Yoga using props - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoga_using_props

    The practice of yoga as exercise is modern, though some of the asanas are ancient and many more are medieval. A band or strap of cloth was however used in ancient times, some 2000 years ago, to support the body in one asana in particular; this device was the yogapaṭṭa, a term defined in Monier Monier-Williams's Sanskrit-English dictionary.

  7. Modern yoga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_yoga

    A few decades later, a very different form of yoga, the prevailing yoga as exercise, was created by Yogendra, Kuvalayananda, and Krishnamacharya, starting in the 1920s.It was predominantly physical, consisting mainly or entirely of asanas, postures derived from those of hatha yoga, but with a contribution from western gymnastics (Niels Bukh's 1924 Primary Gymnastics [6] [7]).

  8. Goraksha Shataka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goraksha_Shataka

    The Gorakṣaśataka was influential but is now less well-known than the Haṭha Yoga Pradīpikā which copies around thirty of its hundred verses, describing techniques such as the pranayama method of ujjāyī or "victorious breath", widely used today in Vinyasa yoga classes.

  9. Haṭhābhyāsapaddhati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haṭhābhyāsapaddhati

    The Haṭhābhyāsapaddhati ("Manual on the practice of Haṭha yoga") is a manual of Haṭha yoga written in Sanskrit in the 18th century, attributed to Kapāla Kuraṇṭaka; it is the only known work before modern yoga to describe elaborate sequences of asanas and survives in a single manuscript.