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38
108 NAMES OF GOD
| 4-29-07 - DREAM - I was sitting in an office counting something. I
got to 38 and woke up suddenly. A Hindu man asked me, "Are you alright?" in my head. I answered telepathically , "Yes!" I the had a vision of a Hindu man and woman walking down a road very quickly, swinging their arms in unison. They were smiling and enjoying themselves. I woke up knowing I had to find out why I was counting to 38 and stopped there to have a conversation with a Hindu man.
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| Hinduism is supposed to be 'apauruseya',
i.e., of impersonal origin & so also are the Gods of Hinduism. They are
eternal & though the deities appear to be different & independent, they are
really facets of the same Brahman, the Supreme God.
As Sri Ramakrishna says, there can be as many spiritual paths as there are spiritual aspirants & similarly there can really be as many Gods as there are devotees to suit the moods, feelings, emotions & social background of the devotees. The Hindu scriptures were eloquent while describing the qualities of God. He is all-knowing & all powerful. He is the very personification of justice, love & beauty. He is ever ready to shower His grace, mercy & blessings on His creation. From the Rig Veda, we come to know of the vedic gods eight Vasus, eleven Rudras, twelve Adityas, Indra & Prajapathi, being the Gods of earth, the heavens & the space. The main Hindu Gods as we accept today can be broadly classified as Saiva Gods (Siva, His consort, His sons, His other forms), Vaishnava Gods (Vishnu, His consort, His various avatharams)& Sakthi or Saktha (Forms of Goddess Sakthi).
Vishnu's consort, Lakshmi, has a number of well-known incarnations that are the center of cults in their own right. In the Ramayana , for example, female characters are responsible for most of the important events, and the dutiful Sita, who resists the advances of lustful Ravana, is a much beloved figure of devotion. Lakshmi receives direct worship along with Ram during the big national festival of Dipavali (Diwali), celebrated with massive fireworks demonstrations, when people pray for success and wealth during the coming year. The Mahabharata is equally packed with tales of male and female relationships in which women hold their own, and the beautiful Draupadi, wife of the five Pandava heroes, has her own cult in scattered locations throughout India. Parvati, in a variety of forms, is the most common focus of devotion in India. She presents two main facets to her worshipers: a benign and accepting personality that provides assistance and a powerful and dangerous personality that must be placated. The benign vision exists in many temples to Shiva throughout the country, where the goddess has her own shrine that is in practice the most frequented site of heartfelt devotion. During annual festivals in which the god and goddess emerge from their shrines and travel in processions, it is often the goddess who is most eagerly anticipated. In North India, for example, life-like statues of the loving goddess Kali, who is ultimately a manifestation of Parvati, are carried through huge crowds that line village and city streets. In South India, where gigantic temples are the physical and social centers of town life, the shrines and their annual festivals are often known by the names of their goddesses. One of the more famous is the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Minakshi Temple in Madurai, Tamil Nadu. The temple is named after the "fish-eyed goddess" Minakshi, described in myths as a dark queen born with three breasts, who set out to conquer the universe. After overrunning the world and vanquishing the gods, Minakshi finally met Shiva and, when her third breast disappeared, accepted him as her lord. This motif of physical power and energy appears in many stories where the goddess is a warrior or conqueror of demons who in the end joins with Shiva. Hindu Goddesses
In many small shrines throughout India, in marked contrast to the large and ornate temples dominated by Brahmanical principles and the philosophy of nonviolence, the female divinity receives regular gifts of blood sacrifices, usually chickens and goats. In addition, the goddess may manifest herself as the bearer of a number of diseases. The goddess of smallpox, known as Shitala in North India and Mariamman in South India, remains a feared and worshiped figure even after the official elimination of the disease, for she is still capable of afflicting people with a number of fevers and poxes. Many more localized forms of goddesses, known by different names in different regions, are the focus for prayers and vows that lead worshipers to undertake acts of austerity and pilgrimages in return for favors. Local Deities-Along many paths in the countryside, and in some urban neighborhoods, there are sacred spots at the base of trees, or small stones set in niches, or simply made statues with flowers or a small flame burning in front of them. These are shrines for deities who are locally honored for protecting the people from harm caused by natural disasters or evil influences. Worshipers often portray these protectors as warriors, and, in some cases, they may be traced back to great human fighters who died for their village and later became immortalized. In South India, there are thousands of hero stones, simple representations of warriors on slabs of stone, found in and around agricultural settlements, in memory of nameless local fighters who may have died while protecting their communities hundreds of years ago. At one time, these stones may have received regular signs of devotion, but they are mostly ignored in contemporary India. In the fields on the outskirts of many villages, there are large, multicolored, terra-cotta figures of warriors with raised swords or figures of war horses; these are open-air shrines of the god Aiyanar, who serves as the village protector and who has very few connections with the great tradition of Hinduism. Local deities may begin to attract the attention of worshipers from a wide geographical area, which may include many villages or neighborhoods, or from a large percentage of the members of particular castes, who come to the deity seeking protection or boons. These deities have their own shrines, which may be simple, independent enclosures with pillared halls or may stand as separate establishments attached to temples of Shiva, Vishnu, or any other great god. Deities at this level attract expressive and ecstatic forms of worship and tend to possess special devotees on a regular basis or enter into their believers during festivals. People who are possessed by the god may speak to their families and friends concerning important personal or social problems, predicting the future or clarifying mysteries. These local gods often expect offerings of animals, usually goats or chickens, which are killed in the vicinity of the shrines and then consumed in communal meals by families and friends. In the twentieth century, there has been an increase in the number of new, regional gods attracting worshipers from many different groups, spurred by vast improvements in transport and communication. For example, in the hills bordering the states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala is a shrine for the god Ayyappan, whose origin is uncertain but who is sometimes called the offspring of Shiva and Vishnu in his female form. Ayyappan's annual festival is a time of pilgrimage for ever-growing numbers of men from throughout South India. These devotees fast and engage in austerities under the leadership of a teacher for weeks beforehand and then travel in groups to the shrine for a glimpse of the god. Bus tickets are hard to obtain for several weeks as masses of elated men, clad in distinctive ritual dhotis of various colors, throng public transportation during their trip to the shrine. In northwestern India, the popularity of the goddess Vaishno Devi has risen meteorically since independence. Vaishno Devi, who combines elements of Lakshmi and Durga, is an extremely benevolent manifestation of the eternal virgin who gives material well-being to her worshipers. One million pilgrims travel annually to her cave shrine in the foothills of the Himalayas, about fifty kilometers north of the city of Jammu. Since the 1950s, the most spectacular example of a deity's increasing influence throughout northern and central India is the cult of Santoshi Ma (Mother of Contentment). Her myths recount the sufferings of a young woman left alone by her working husband and abused by her in-laws, who nevertheless remains loving and faithful to her man and, by performing simple vows to the goddess (fasting one day every week), eventually sees the return of her now-rich husband and moves with him into her own house. Santoshi Ma, thought to be the daughter of Ganesh, is worshiped mostly by lower middle-class women who also pray for material goods. In the 1980s and early 1990s, her shrines were spreading everywhere and even taking over older temples, aided by the release in the 1970s of an extremely popular film version of her story, Jay Santoshi Ma . Hindu Goddesses, Courtesy Library of congress,1995 FROM:http://www.indianchild.com/hindu_goddesses.htm "Hindu goddesses"
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LalitA sahasra-nAma is famous for the internal organization of its text and the rhythmic sound vibrations it can produce.. Usually, in a sahasranAma, if the same name repeats, the commentators use their scholarship and inspiration to give different meanings to different occurrences of the same name. LalitA sahasranAma has the unique distinction, among all the sahasranamas, of not repeating even a single name. Further, in order to maintain the metre, sahasranAmas use the artifice of adding words like tu, api, ca, hi, - which are only conjunctions nnot necessarily needed for the meaning except in rare cases of interpretation. Lalita sahasranAma has again the unique distinction of not having even a single such innocuous word in its texture.
These extracts from the 'catalogues' of God's names are not meant to overwhelm the reader; they are given only to show that these sahsra-nAmas are not just directories or name lists compiled for the benefit of expectant mothers though they are often used for this purpose by parents. Each name has a profound significance in terms of the entire gamut of Hindu religion and philosophy. To recite these names is to be immersed in the wealth of their meanings and this is the surest way to concentrate on God and delight in ecstatic states of experience in His remembrance.
The LalitA-sahasra-nAmA and the LalitA-triSatI (= 300 names of LalitA) are the two most famous stotras of the Goddess. They were both taught by Hayagriva, Her foremost devotee, who was Himself VishNu incarnate, to Agastya, the sage of all sages. The first one was originally recited by the vAg-devatAs, the goddesses of speech, right in the presence of Goddess LalitA Herself. The second one was originally composed by no less a divinity than Lord Siva and Parvati, taking turns.
The VishNu-sahasra-nAma was taught by Bhishma to Yudhishtira, the eldest of the Pandavas. The bhAghavataM says that there are only twelve men in the whole world who know the ins and outs of dharma in all its subtlety. These twelve are: BrahmA, the Creator; Narada, the roving sage; Lord Siva; Lord SubrahmaNya; the sage Kapila; Manu the law-giver; the boy-devotee Prahlada; King Janaka; Bhishma; King Bali; the boy-sage Suka, the reciter of the bhAgavatam; and Yama, the Lord of Death and Dispenser of Justice:
svayambhUr-nAradas-SambhuH kumAraH kapilo manuH /
prahlAdo janako bhIshmo balir-vyAsakir-vayaM //
This is a statement by the God of Death himself to his assistants in the story of ajAmiLa as related in the bhAgavatam. Thus Bhishma happens to be one of the twelve most knowledgeable people on dharma. It was fitting therefore that when Yudhishtira, at the end of the mahA-bhArata war wanted to know all the subtleties of all the different types of dharma, he was asked to go to Bhishma by Lord Krishna Himself. After all the dharmas (of Kings, of persons, of women) had been talked about, finally Yudhishtira asks six fundamental questions:
· What is the One Supreme God?
· What is the One Ultimate Resort?
· What is the One by worshipping which man can attainin everything that is good for him?
· What is the One whose praise by man will give him everything that is good for him?
· What dharma is considered to be the greatest of all dharmas?
· What is the One by the memory of which man may be released from the cycle of births and deaths?
To all these questions Bhishma answers by quoting the VishNu-sahasra-nAma as the ultimate answer and so he recites the VishNu-sahasra-nAma to Yudhishtira. Bhishma says that either by meditating on these names or by reciting them or by doing prostrations to God using these names ( dhyAyan-stuvan-namasyamSca) one obtains everything that has to be obtained.
In the southern parts of India whenever any collective religious worship is planned or intended one practice is to repeat the names from a sahasra-nAma and do flower offerings to either a temple deity or a specially invoked deity for this purpose. This is the most sanctified way in which these sahasra-nAmas are used. Each name is taken in the dative case, prefixed by AUM and suffixed by NAMAH: thus, aum viSvasmai namah; aum vishNave namaH, … and so on through all the names. This simply means, Prostrations to viSvam, Prostrations to vishNu and so on. The importance of aum for Hinduism is well known. This way all the names in the sahasra-nAma are repeated to make up one thousand and eight prostrations in the form of flower offerings to the deity. Such a ritual pUjA is called a sahasra-nAma archanA. This method of worship is very popular both at home and in temples and public functions. A far more intensive version of this is for several people to sit together, perform the arcanA in chorus and finish in a prefixed time (usually several days, each day for a certain number of hours) one hundred such sahasra-nAma arcanAs, counting the number of arcanAs according to the multiplicity of people who joined in the chorus. This composite congregational programme is called a lakshArcanA (laksha = 100,000) since the recital of the different people for the several days adds up to 100,000 repetitions of God's names. (Each arcanA has 1008 names but we do not count the extra eight). There are occasions when a koTi arcanA is also performed to the deity by counting up to 100 lakshArcanAs (koTi is 100 lakshas, that is, ten million). Such massive repetitions of God's names has been one of the soundest traditions which have kept up the torch of spiritual fervour alive through the ages.
FROM: http://www.geocities.com/profvk/gohitvip/1205.html
Goddesses are an integral part of Hinduism, and the worship of goddesses is a significant aspect of Hindu religion. The number of goddesses in the ancient and the contemporary Hinduism is overwhelming, and each one of the goddess has her own mythology and history, appearance and roles, characters and attributes. Some scholars believe that all goddesses of the Hindu pantheon are different manifestations of the single super-goddess (Devi), and there are Hindu texts, myths and traditions that affirm this theory. Others believe they represent feminine aspects of a greater, unitary divine entity.
The Indus Valley Civilization, with its neighboring cultures of Zhob and Kulli regions in Balochistan, have yielded data on prehistoric religious practices on the Indian subcontinent dating back to 3000 BC. Some scholars suggest that the Indus Valley culture has a cult of the Great Mother or the Divine Mother, similar to such cults in Asia Minor and the Mediterranean; and some have even hazarded a guess that this may be the earliest form of Shaktism.
The Vedic literature describes a number of significant goddesses including Ushas, Prithivi, Aditi, Saraswati, Vac, Nirrti, Ratri; and a number of minor ones, including Puramdhi, Parendi, Raka, Dhisana, – hardly mentioned about a dozen times in the Rig Veda, and they all are associated with bounties and riches. Few others like Ila, Bharati, Mahi, Hotra are invoked and summoned through hymns to take their share during certain rituals.
Other Hindu goddesses include Lakshmi(also called Mahalakshmi), Parvati,Radha, Durga, Kali (also known as Mahakali), Mahadevi, Matrakas, Tara, Chhinnamasta, Mahavidyas,*SaptaShrungi,Renuka,Bhavani,Shree Mahalasa, Andal(also known as Kothai) and several other goddesses associated with rivers and places.
According to the Vedas, Shakti is claimed to be Maya or illusion that casts a veil over Brahman, the Ultimate reality. Shakti and Brahman are inseparable entities that lie in a single body which reaffirms the claim that Shakti and Shiva coexist.
Sri, commonly known as Lakshmi and also called Sri Lakshmi, is one of the most popular and widely worshiped Goddess in Hindu tradition since pre-Buddhist period. She has a considerable body of mythology and history. The earliest legend states that Sri is born as a result of austerities of Prajapati, and she represents ten qualities and objects, namely, food, royal power, universal sovereignty, noble rank, power, holy luster, kingdom, fortune, bounteousness, and beauty.
The earliest Vedic literature does not have any goddess named Sri Lakshmi or Lakshmi, but Sri appears in several Vedic hymns, and Sri is indicative of several positive attributes including beauty, glory, power, capability, and higher rank. In later Vedic literature, Sri signified the ruling power and the majesty of kings. Sri-Sukta, a hymn appended to the Rig Veda, is a famous Vedic chant, extolling Sri, and presents a detailed account of her, both conceptually and visually. The hymn also associates her with lotus and elephant – an association, which has not changed in subsequent history.
By the late epic period (400 AD), Lakshmi became associated with Vishnu, and emerged as his wife or consort, and acquired - in addition to her earlier attributes - characteristics of a model wife.
Parvati, that is the daughter of the mountains (the Himalayas), is wife of Shiva, and is generally considered a benign goddess. She has been identified as a reincarnation of Dakshayani, Shiva’s first wife, who destroyed her by self-immolation because her father, Daksha, insulted Shiva. Parvati when depicted alongside Shiva appears with two arms, but when alone, she is shown having four arms, and astride a tiger or lion. She is also known by a number of other names, including Ambika (mother), Gauri (golden), Shyama (dark complexioned), Bhairavi (awesome) and Kali (black-colored)
In classical Hindu mythology, the raison d’ętre of Parvati, and before that of Sati, is to lure Shiva into marriage and thus into a wider circle of worldly affairs. With the plays of Kalidas (5th-6th centuries) and the Puranas (4th through the 13th centuries) the myths of Sati, Parvati and Shiva acquired comprehensive details.
Mahalasa Devi is a female form of Vishnu. During the churning of the Ocean, Vishnu took the form of a woman to distract the Asuras from the pitcher of nectar. It is said that Mahalasa is another form of Durga and a sister of Kali. The temples for the Goddess are largely located in Goa, Maharashtra, Karnataka and in Nepal. In all these places, she is flanked by Santeri (Durga) on the right and the five Ganas, the five male attendants of the Goddess.
The Goddess has a very large following among the Saraswat Brahmins in Goa, Karnatake this Goddess as their family Goddess.
She wears a Yadnopavitra (the holy thread) that only Brahmin males and male Gods usually wear.
Saraswati, the flowing one, is one of the most celebrated goddesses from the Vedic period through current times. She has been repeatedly mentioned in the Rig Veda, and has been identified with the Saraswati River. Over a period of time, in later Hinduism, her connection with a river decreased considerably, and she is no longer a goddess who embodies sacrality of a river, but has acquired her independent history and attributes.
She is the goddess of speech and learning, and is the creator of Sanskrit, the language of the Vedas. She is equally revered by Hindus, Jains and the Buddhists. Her iconography depicts her association with art. science and culture, which is dramatically different from some other major goddesses who are identified with fertility, wealth, and battles. She is shown as having four arms, and the most common items held by her in her hands are a book, a vina (lute), a rosary, and a water pot. The book signified art, science and learning; the vina associates her with music and performing arts; and the prayer beads and water pot signify her association with religious rites.
Sita is one of the most popular divinities of Hinduism. Currently, Sita is associated with Rama (an avatar of Vishnu) as his wife, and she receives worship along with her husband Rama. She is one of the many incarnations of Lakshmi.
A female divinity called Sita was known before the Ramayana of Valmiki. Sita literally means “furrow”, that is, the line made while plowing the land, and in Vedic period, she was one of the goddesses associated with fertility. A Vedic hymn recites:
Auspicious Sita, come thou near;
We venerate and worship thee
That thou mayst bless and prosper us
And bring us fruits abundantly.
The Kausik-sutra and the Paraskara-sutra associates her repeatedly as the wife of Parjanya (a god associated with rains) and Indra.
She emerged as a significant divinity with Valmiki’s Ramayana, written sometime between 200 BC and 200 AD, and various vernacular renditions of the same, with slightly modified contents, over next several centuries. These texts extols Rama and Sita as the divine couple, and countless mythology, legend, and folklores revolve around them. Sita is always represented in association with Rama, her husband, and Rama is central to her life and existence. She has the dominant role of all Hindu mythological tradition as far as the portrayal of ideal woman and ideal wife is concerned. She represents wifely devotion, forbearance and chastity. She overshadows several other divine Hindu wives including Parvati and Lakshmi, and other similar devoted wives of Hindu mythology like Savitri and Damayanti.
Her current history states that she emerged from the earth when king Janaka was plowing the field during a ritual to invoke rains. She was married to Rama, was abducted by Ravana, reclaimed by Rama, and then banished out of his kingdom. In the forests, in an ashram of Valmiki, she raised her two sons, Kusha and Lava, who engaged the royal forces of Rama and inflicted heavy damage. Rama himself comes to fight with the, when Valmiki told him that they were his own sons. Rama requests Sita to come back, but remembering the injustices meted out to her, she called her mother Earth to receive her back, the ground opens up and she returned to where she had originally emerged.
Radha, which means prosperity and success, is one of the Gopis of Vrindavan, and is a central figure of Vaishnava theology. Early literature speaks of a favourite Gopi of Krishna, but her details emerge clearly centuries later. Jayadeva’s Gitagovinda (12th century) presents a full depiction of Radha and her association with Krishna. She is also regarded as an incarnation of Lakshmi, particularly by followers of Chaitanya (16th century).
Traditionally, Radha’s love for Krishna is likened to human soul’s yearning for God, and she is regarded as an ultimate model for devotees. Her role is also to be an intermediary between man and God.
In Hindu pantheon, Durga is one of the most popular goddesses, and her creation takes place in the context of a cosmic crisis. The asuras were on the ascent, and they had become a threat to cosmic stability. The male gods were unable to contain and subdue them. A number of male gods having failed to subdue the demons led by Mahishasura, assemble into a conclave and emitted their energies upon Uma/Parvati, the wife of Shiva, who became the warrior goddess, Durga, that is, the invincible.
Vedic literature does not have any particular goddess matching the concept of Durga though it has references to certain goddesses as slayers of demons. Taitriya-aranyaka mentions Durga, but not in a manner comparable to Durga of later Hinduism. Around 4th century AD, images of Durga slaying Mahishasura begin to become common in many palaces in the Indian subcontinent.
At certain point of her history, Durga became associated with Shiva as his wife, and she acquired homely characters in this role. This is often characterized in her iconography in which she is shown flanked by four deities identified as her children: Karttikeya, Ganesh, Saraswati, and Lakshmi.
The theology underlying Durga’s emergence and exploits are revealed in Devi Mahatmyam, the most famous text extolling her exploits, and is described: "Though she is eternal, the goddess becomes manifest over and over again to protect the world". This makes her on par with various avatars of Vishnu.
One of the most famous festivals associate with her is Durga Puja cleberated in the month of Ashvin (September-October), and is also called Navaratri festival.
≤she i worshiped by small kids as "vashno devi" in paschim puri in pocket 3 first park she is also worshiped as ≤balleshvari devi≥ godess of small kids
Kali is one of the most significant divinities, and many texts and contexts treat Kali as an independent deity, not directly associated with a male god. In case she is associated with a male god, it is invariably Shiva. In this aspect, she represents the omnipotent Shakti of Shiva. She holds both the creative and destructive power of time.
The earliest reference to Kali in Hindu tradition date back to the 6th Century, and locate her in the battle fields fighting asurs. Her temples are recommended to be built away from human habitations. Vana Bhatta's 7th century drama Kadambari features a goddess named Chandi, an epithet of both Kali and Durga.
Kali’s most famous appearance in battle contexts are found in the Devi Mahatmya when during the battle with asuras, Durga becomes angry. Her face turns pitch dark, and suddenly Kali springs forth from Durga’s forehead. She is black, wears a garland of human heads, is clothed in a tiger skin, and wields a staff topped by a human skull. She destroys the asuras. Later, Durga seeks her assistance once more to annihilate Raktabija. Kali’s mythology recounts several such appearances, mostly in terrible aspects.
== she is also known as "pawa ni devi"{gujrati name} she is worshiped by
community called as halwodia in halwad(gujrat) there is her tample also
if u wanna se her in any mans body u should come to halwad == story
behind "maa pawa ni devi" in pawa gad
≤ "once a time godess kali comes on earth for garba in navratra. King of pawa named as boj gad is great deevoty of godess kali in navratra he hold kali devi's hand and ask her to marry him as he did'nt know about her that she is godess kali .She ask him to live her hand but he didnt .She says you dont know me but theres his end devi kiled him .afterward she cries to that i killed my great deevoty and she goes to peak of pawagad to go inside the peak ther she meets a ramta jogi named as swamy mangan .He ask devi that whereare you going she says that i kill my great deevoty im going to peak of pawagad. she goas inside peak halfly than swami mangan hold her hairs after she enter halfly she is there in pawagad
that is why she is called as "Pawa ni devi"".≥
See also: KALI
ANGER
Many texts, myths and rituals concerning goddess subsume them all under one great female being, named generally as Mahadevi or simply as Devi. Earliest Hindu tradition as reflected in the Vedas speak of discrete goddesses like Lakshmi and Parvati. Later, there emerged a tendency to relate all goddesses to one ultimate goddess, the best example of such texts being the Devi Mahatamaya. Another important feature of Mahadevi mythology and theology is the insistence that assumes both benign and terrible aspects of Mahadevi.
Mahavidyas, that is, the supreme knowledge, revelations and manifestations, refer to a group of ten goddesses. They constitute an important aspect of Mahadevi theology, which emphasizes that the Devi has a tendency to manifest and display herself in a variety of forms and aspects. Mahavidyas find no mention in the earliest Hindu texts, but appeared relatively late in Hindu tradition. According to some scholars, [attribution needed] they are actually ten Tantric goddesses and parts of Kali, personifying her different facets. Seven of them represent creative forces embodies in Kali, and the remaining three embody her destructive nature and aspects. In the context of Hindu mythology, the origin of the ten Mahavidyas takes place in the story of Sati and Shiva.
Ten Mahavidyas are: Kali herself, Tara, Chinnamasta, Bhuvanesvari, Bagla, Dhumavati, Kamla, Matangi, Sodasi, and Bhairavi.
Matrikas, that is, the mothers, are a band of divinities, which always appear in a group.
| Hinduism | Hindu mythology | Indian epic poetry | |
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| Female Deities: Devi | Saraswati | Lakshmi | Dakshayani | Gayatri | Parvati | Durga | Shakti | Kali | Sita | Radha | Mahavidya | more... | |
| Male Deities: Deva |Brahma | Vishnu | Shiva | Rama | Krishna | Ganesha | Murugan | Hanuman | Indra | Surya | more... | |
| Texts: Vedas | Upanishads | Puranas | Ramayana | Mahabharata | Rigveda | |
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The VedasThere are four Vedas, the Rig Veda, Sama Veda, Yajur Veda and Atharva Veda. The Vedas are the primary texts of Hinduism. They also had a vast influence on Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. The Rig Veda, the oldest of the four Vedas, was composed about 1500 B.C., and codified about 600 B.C. It is unknown when it was finally comitted to writing, but this probably was at some point after 300 B.C.The Vedas contain hymns, incantations, and rituals from ancient India. Along with the Book of the Dead, the Enuma Elish, the I Ching, and the Avesta, they are among the most ancient religious texts still in existence. Besides their spiritual value, they also give a unique view of everyday life in India four thousand years ago. The Vedas are also the most ancient extensive texts in an Indo-European language, and as such are invaluable in the study of comparative linguistics. RIG VEDA SAMA VEDA YAJUR VEDA ATHARVA VEDA A Vedic Reader for
Students by A.A. Macdonell [1917] (excerpts)
121,143 bytes Upanishads The Upanishads
(Sacred Books of the East, vols. 1 and 15) PuranasThe Puranas are post-Vedic texts which typically contain a complete narrative of the history of the Universe from creation to destruction, genealogies of the kings, heroes and demigods, and descriptions of Hindu cosmology and geography. There are 17 or 18 canonical Puranas, divided into three categories, each named after a deity: Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. There are also many other works termed Purana, known as 'Upapuranas.' The Vishnu Purana
by H.H. Wilson [1840] A Vishnu Purana with Dantesque descriptions of the afterlife, and details of Hindu funeral rites. The S'rimad Devî Bhâgawatam translated by Swami Vijnanananda (Hari Prasanna Chatterji) [1921] This is one of the Upapuranas, devoted to the Devi (Goddess). The Devî Gita translated by Swami Vijnanananda (Hari Prasanna Chatterji) [1921] The Song of the Goddess. This is an excerpt from the S'rimad Devî Bhâgawatam (above) The Prem Sagur (Prem Sagar) by Lallu Lal, translated by W. Hollings [1848] English translation of a popular Hindi retelling of the Krishna cycle, based on the tenth book of the Bhagavata Purana. Other Primary Texts The Laws of Manu
George Bühler, translator [1886] (Sacred Books of the East, vol. 25) The EpicsThe Mahabharata and Ramayana are the national epics of India. They are probably the longest poems in any language. The Mahabharata, attributed to the sage Vyasa, was written down from 540 to 300 B.C. The Mahabharata tells the legends of the Bharatas, a Vedic Aryan group. The Ramayana, attributed to the poet Valmiki, was written down during the first century A.D., although it is based on oral traditions that go back six or seven centuries earlier. The Ramayana is a moving love story with moral and spiritual themes that has deep appeal in India to this day. In addition, a key Hindu sacred text, the Bhagavad Gita, is embedded in Book Six of the Mahabharata. The Mahabharata has its own page: The Mahabharata translated by Kisari Mohan Ganguli [1883-1896]The Mahabharata in Sanskrit Unicode text with parallel Devanagari and Romanization. Rámáyan Of Válmíki
,translated by Ralph T. H. Griffith [1870-1874] The Ramayana in
Sanskrit The Ramayana and
Mahabharata R. Dutt translator [1899] Indian Idylls Sir Edwin
Arnold, translator [1883] 279,713 bytes Love and Death
by Sri Arobindo [1921] The Bhagavad Gita, usually considered part of the sixth book of the Mahabharata (dating from about 400 or 300 B.C.), is a central text of Hinduism, a philosphical dialog between the god Krishna and the warrior Arjuna. This is one of the most popular and accessible of all Hindu scriptures, required reading for anyone interested in Hinduism. The Gita discusses selflessness, duty, devotion, and meditation, integrating many different threads of Hindu philosophy. The Bhagavadgîtâ
(SBE 8) with the Sanatsugâtîya and the Anugîtâ translated by Kâshinâth
Trimbak Telang, (Sacred Books of the East, Vol. 8) [1882] The Bhagavad Gita in
Sanskrit The Bhagavad
Gita
The Bhagavad Gita
Sir Edwin Arnold, translator [1885] Vedanta The Vedântâ-Sűtras
(SBE 48) with commentary by Râmânuja, translated by George Thibaut;
(Sacred Books of the East, Vol. 48) [1904] Later Texts The Yoga Sutras
of Patanjali 80,965 bytes This concise work describes an early stage
in the philosophy and practise of Yoga. Dating from about 150 B.C., the work
shows dualist and Buddhist influences. The Yoga Sutras are required reading
if you are interested in Yoga and meditation. The Vimanika Shastra Modern Books Old Deccan Days
by Mary Frere [1868] Works of Sister Nivedita (Margaret E. Noble) The Web of Indian Life by Sister Nivedita (Margaret E. Noble) [1904] Studies from an Eastern Home by Sister Nivedita (Margaret E. Noble) [1913] Saddhana, The Realisation of Life [1915] The Crescent Moon [1916] Fruit-Gathering [1916] Stray Birds [1916] The Home and the World [1915] Thought Relics [1921] Songs of Kabîr The Indian Stories of F.W. Bain A Heifer of the Dawn [1904] Also of Interest Journal articles:
Hinduism
Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa Yogananda [1946] [External Site] |
http://www.hinduwisdom.info/quotes101_120.htm
http://www.hinduwisdom.info/contents.htm
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