enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Animal sacrifice in Hinduism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_sacrifice_in_Hinduism

    Animal sacrifice is practiced in the states of Assam, Odisha, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Tripura in Eastern India, as well as in the nation of Nepal. The sacrifice involves slaying of goats, chickens, pigeons and male Water buffaloes. [27] For example, one of the largest animal sacrifice in Nepal occurs over the three-day-long Gadhimai festival.

  3. Depukhu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depukhu

    Some years before 2013, an attempt was reportedly made to replace goat sacrifice with a symbolic sacrifice of a pumpkin brought from Rudrayani temple, but it had minimal impact as the tradition continued unchanged. [2] Setopati reported that, in 2017, the sacrifice ritual was different from years before. While the kid was still drowned by a ...

  4. Animal sacrifice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_sacrifice

    Animal sacrifice was general among the ancient Near Eastern civilizations of Ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt and Persia, as well as the Hebrews (covered below).Unlike the Greeks, who had worked out a justification for keeping the best edible parts of the sacrifice for the assembled humans to eat, in these cultures the whole animal was normally placed on the fire by the altar and burned, or ...

  5. Animal worship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_worship

    This type of worship has sometimes been said to have originated from the goat's increased sex drive. One male goat was capable of fertilizing 150 females. [37] The Greek god Pan was depicted as having goat characteristics, such as hooves, horns, and a beard. Along with Pan, the goat was closely related to Dionysus during the Roman era. [37]

  6. Aqiqah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aqiqah

    According to hadith and the majority of Islamic scholars, two goats are sacrificed for a boy and one for a girl. [3] [4] If one cannot slaughter on the seventh day, someone may slaughter on the fourteenth day or on the twenty-first day. If one is not capable of doing so, then a person may slaughter any time before the puberty of the child.

  7. Fertility rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fertility_rite

    Ancient Phoenicia saw "a special sacrifice at the season of the harvest, to reawaken the spirit of the vine"; while the winter fertility rite to restore "the spirit of the withering vine" included as sacrifice "cooking a kid in the milk of its mother, a Canaanite custom which Mosaic law condemned and formally forbade".

  8. Altar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altar

    A possible use of the hörgr during a sacrifice would be to place upon it a bowl of the blood of an animal sacrificed to a Norse deity (e.g. a goat for Thor, a sow for Freyja, a boar for Freyr), then dipping a bundle of fir twigs into it and sprinkling the participants with the blood. This would consecrate the attendees to the ceremony, such as ...

  9. Ceremonies of ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceremonies_of_ancient_greece

    Animal sacrifices were also accompanied by singing and prayer. The animal was chosen and should be of good stock and in good health, and bulls were preferred over other animals, though sacrifices could involve cows, sheep, goats, pigs, and birds, however, sheep were the most common animal that was sacrificed. [5]