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Atharvaveda

A Wisdom Archive on Atharvaveda

Atharvaveda

A selection of articles related to Atharvaveda

We recommend this article: Atharvaveda - 1, and also this: Atharvaveda - 2.
atharvaveda, Atharvaveda, Atharvaveda - Dating, Atharvaveda - Editions, Atharvaveda - Issues of note, Atharvaveda - Recensions, Atharvaveda - Status

ARTICLES RELATED TO Atharvaveda

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia II - Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s ganas and the Kamboja

Panini has also read Kamboja in the ganas to IV.2.133 (Kachhadi ) and IV.3.93 (Sindhuvadi) and has recommended adding affix like aÑ etc to obtain appropriate derivatives to denote the ancestral homeland of Kamboja Kshatriyas (abhijana) and the name of products native to the Kamboja-land as follows: Kamboja + aÑ => Kaamboja where Kaamboja denotes the ancestral homeland of the Kambojas. The same term Kaamboja may also denote a horse or an e ...

See also:

Kambojas of Panini, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s Sutras 4.1.168-4.1.177, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s Kshatiya monarchies, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s rules for janapadas and the Kshatriya settlers, Kambojas of Panini - Kshatriya tribes and their janapadas, Kambojas of Panini - Kshatiya descendents and their rulers, Kambojas of Panini - Special rule for Kamboja, Kambojas of Panini - Comments on special rule for Kamboja, Kambojas of Panini - Katyayana's expansion of sutra 4.1.175, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s ganas and the Kamboja, Kambojas of Panini - Ganapatha on Panini’s rule and the Kambojas

Read more here: » Kambojas of Panini: Encyclopedia II - Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s ganas and the Kamboja

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia II - Kambojas of Panini - Ganapatha on Panini’s rule and the Kambojas

The Ganapatha 178 on Panini's rule II.1.72 - Mayuravyamsakad'i' informs us that the Kambojas and the Yavanas observed a social custom of supporting short-cut head-hair: Sanskrit: Kamboja-mundah Yavana-mundah i.e shaved headed Kambojas, shaved headed Yavanas. This same fact is also conveyed by the Mahabharata: Sanskrit: mundanetanhanishyami danavaniva vasavah. pratigyam parayishyami Kambojan.eva ma vaha. — (MBH ...

See also:

Kambojas of Panini, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s Sutras 4.1.168-4.1.177, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s Kshatiya monarchies, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s rules for janapadas and the Kshatriya settlers, Kambojas of Panini - Kshatriya tribes and their janapadas, Kambojas of Panini - Kshatiya descendents and their rulers, Kambojas of Panini - Special rule for Kamboja, Kambojas of Panini - Comments on special rule for Kamboja, Kambojas of Panini - Katyayana's expansion of sutra 4.1.175, Kambojas of Panini - Panini’s ganas and the Kamboja, Kambojas of Panini - Ganapatha on Panini’s rule and the Kambojas

Read more here: » Kambojas of Panini: Encyclopedia II - Kambojas of Panini - Ganapatha on Panini’s rule and the Kambojas

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia II - Kamboja Location - Localization of Kamboja

Kamboja Location - Linguistic evidence. The most acceptable view is that the ancient Kambojas originally belonged to the 'Galcha' speaking area (the Iranian Pamirs and Badakshan) in Central Asia (Linguistic Survey of India, Vol X, p 455, Dr G. A. Grierson). Yaska's Nirukata (II/2.8) attests that verb 'shavati' in the sense 'to go' was used by the Kambojas and only the Kambojas (Early Eastern Iran and Atharvaveda, 1980, 92, Dr Michael Witzel; also Nilukata, Vol I, Sarup). shavatir gatikarmaa Ka ...

See also:

Kamboja Location, Kamboja Location - Kambojas: a tribe of Uttarapatha, Kamboja Location - Epic evidence, Kamboja Location - Puranic Bhuvankosa evidence, Kamboja Location - Localization of Kamboja, Kamboja Location - Linguistic evidence, Kamboja Location - Vamsa Brahmana and Aitareya Brahmana evidence, Kamboja Location - Ptolemy's evidence, Kamboja Location - Raghuvamsa's evidence, Kamboja Location - Evidence from Commentator on Harsha-Carita, Kamboja Location - Hiun Tsang's evidence, Kamboja Location - Kalhana's evidence, Kamboja Location - Ramayana evidence, Kamboja Location - Sumerian evidence, Kamboja Location - Al-Idrisi's evidence, Kamboja Location - Praja Bhatta's evidence, Kamboja Location - Conclusion, Kamboja Location - Kamboja versus Parama Kamboja, Kamboja Location - Mahabharata evidence, Kamboja Location - Ptolemy's evidence, Kamboja Location - Evidence from Dasam-Granth, Kamboja Location - Galcha evidence, Kamboja Location - List of references

Read more here: » Kamboja Location: Encyclopedia II - Kamboja Location - Localization of Kamboja

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Rama

Rāma or Rama (rāma in IAST, राम (or Sri Rama: श्रीराम) in Devanagari) is the Seventh Avatara of Vishnu. His full name is Ramachandra, and he is reverently addressed as Sri Rama. He is the embodiment of the Absolute Brahman and Dharma. He is the Mariyada ...

Including:

Read more here: » Rama: Encyclopedia - Rama

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - History of Early Hinduism

Please remove this notice after the article has been expanded. Details are on this talk page or at Wikipedia:Requests for expansion. The history of Hinduism begins around 7,000 years ago and continues till the dawn of the Gupta Empire in India, and the organized, written records and preservation of important historical documents. Hinduism was synthesized in these misty centuries, from the ancient Indo-Iranian Vedic religion, the religious and philosophical practices of the peoples of the Indus Valley Civil ...

Including:

Read more here: » History of Early Hinduism: Encyclopedia - History of Early Hinduism

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - History of India

The History of India can be traced in fragments as far back as 700,000 years ago. The Indus Valley civilization, one of the oldest in the world, dates back at least 5,000 years. According to the Indo-Aryan migration hypothesis, the so-called Aryans from the north-west of the Indian subcontinent migrated between 2000 BCE and 1500 BCE, possibly from Central Asia or the Middle East; their merger with the earlier Dravidian inhabitants apparently resulted in classical Indian culture. Arab incursions starting in the 8th century and Turkish ...

Including:

Read more here: » History of India: Encyclopedia - History of India

Atharvaveda: Sai Baba Dictionary on Vedas

Vedas:

Vedas: [see also Vedas] Sacred scriptures of the Hindu religion. (BV-32). The Sacred scriptures revealed by the Supreme Being, adopted by the Hindus. There are four parts: Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda, Atharvaveda. The original revealed scriptures, first spoken by Lord Krishna.

 

(See also: Vedas, Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Vedas

Shruti Vedas Rig Veda Sama Veda Yajur Veda Atharva Veda Brahmanas Aranyakas Upanishads Smriti Itihāsas Mahābhārata Bhagavad Gītā Ramayana Puranas (List) Tantras Sutras (List) Stotras Ashtavakra Gita Gita ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vedas: Encyclopedia - Vedas

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Varuna

Shruti Vedas Rig Veda Sama Veda Yajur Veda Atharva Veda Brahmanas Aranyakas Upanishads Smriti Itihāsas Mahābhārata Bhagavad Gītā Ramayana Puranas (List) Tantras Sutras (List) Stotras Ashtavakra Gita Gita Govinda Hatha Yoga Pradipika This article is about the god. See 20000 Varu ...

Including:

Read more here: » Varuna: Encyclopedia - Varuna

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Vedic Sanskrit

Vedic Sanskrit is the language of the Vedas, the earliest sacred texts of India. The earliest of the Vedas, the Rigveda, was composed in the 2nd millennium BC, and use of the Vedic dialect was continued for the composition of religious texts until roughly 500 BC, when the later Classical Sanskrit language began to emerge. The Vedic form of Sanskrit is an early descendant of Proto-Indo-Iranian (spoken around 2000 BC), and still comparatively similar (being removed by maybe 1500 years) to the Proto-Indo-European language. Vedic S ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vedic Sanskrit: Encyclopedia - Vedic Sanskrit

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - History of Early Hinduism

Please remove this notice after the article has been expanded. Details are on this talk page or at Wikipedia:Requests for expansion. The history of Hinduism begins around 7,000 years ago and continues till the dawn of the Gupta Empire in India, and the organized, written records and preservation of important historical documents. Hinduism was synthesized in these misty centuries, from the ancient Indo-Iranian Vedic religion, the religious and philosophical practices of the peoples of the Indus Valley Civil ...

Including:

Read more here: » History of Early Hinduism: Encyclopedia - History of Early Hinduism

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Shakha

Shakha (IAST śākhā), literally "branch" or "limb", is the Sanskrit term for a recension or version of Vedic texts according to a particular school. The scholars of a given shakha are properly called a caraṇa, but the term shakha is u ...

Read more here: » Shakha: Encyclopedia - Shakha

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Rama

Rāma or Rama (rāma in IAST, राम (or Sri Rama: श्रीराम) in Devanagari) is the Seventh Avatara of Vishnu. His full name is Ramachandra, and he is reverently addressed as Sri Rama. He is the embodiment of the Absolute Brahman and Dharma. He is the Mariyada ...

Including:

Read more here: » Rama: Encyclopedia - Rama

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Yoni

The word yoni is the Sanskrit word for the 'female reproductive organ'. Translated directly into English, it could mean vulva or vagina. It also has a wider meaning in religious and spiritual contexts, where its meaning is 'creativity'. The yoni is also considered to be symbolic of Shakti or other goddesses of a similar nature. Yoni is perhaps the most misused and misunderstood word from the ancient Indo-Aryanic language, Sanskrit. The word yoni was originally used more often in a spiritual sense rather than as a term to ...

Including:

Read more here: » Yoni: Encyclopedia - Yoni

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Mundaka Upanishad

Shruti Vedas Rig Veda Sama Veda Yajur Veda Atharva Veda Brahmanas Aranyakas Upanishads Smriti Itihāsas Mahābhārata Bhagavad Gītā Ramayana Puranas (List) Tantras Sutras (List) Stotras Ashtavakra GitaIncluding:

Read more here: » Mundaka Upanishad: Encyclopedia - Mundaka Upanishad

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Vedic priesthood

The Vedic priesthood is the collective term for the priests of the Vedic religion. Known as purohita, the priests are divided into several types: The Hotar is the chief priest, presiding the sacrifice. He is associated with the Rigveda. The Udgatar intones the hymns for the Hotar. He is associated with the Samaveda. The Adhvaryu carries out the actual sacrifice. He is associated with the Yajurveda. In mythology, he is presented as a newcomer, probably corresponding to a histor ...

Read more here: » Vedic priesthood: Encyclopedia - Vedic priesthood

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Brahmana

Shruti Vedas Rig Veda Sama Veda Yajur Veda Atharva Veda Brahmanas Aranyakas Upanishads Smriti Itihāsas Mahābhārata Bhagavad Gītā Ramayana Puranas (List) Tantras Sutras (List) Stotras Ashtavakra Gita Gi ...

Read more here: » Brahmana: Encyclopedia - Brahmana

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia - Vishnu

Vishnu (IAST viṣṇu, Devanagari विष्णु, with honorific Shri Vishnu; śrī viṣṇu, श्रीविष्णु ), is a form of God, to whom many Hindus pray. For Vaishn ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vishnu: Encyclopedia - Vishnu

Atharvaveda: Ayurveda Ayurvedic Dictionary on Ayurveda

Ayurveda is the oldest surviving complete medical system in the world. Derived from its ancient Sanskrit roots - ‘ayus' (life) and ‘ved' (knowledge) – and offering a rich, comprehensive outlook to a healthy life, its origins go back nearly 5000 years. To when it was expounded and practiced by the same spiritual rishis, who laid the foundations of the Vedic civilisation in India, by organising the fundamentals of life into proper systems.

 

The main source of knowledge in this field therefore remain the Vedas, the divine books of knowledge they propounded, and more specifically the fourth of the series, namely Atharvaveda that dates back to around 1000 BC. Of the few other treatises on Ayurveda that have survived from around the same time, the most famous are Charaka Samhita and the Sushruta Samhita which concentrate on internal medicine and surgery respectively. The Astanga Hridayam is a more concise compilation of earlier texts that was created about a thousand years ago. These between them forming a greater part of the knowledge base on Ayurveda as it is practiced today.

 

The art of Ayurveda had spread around in the 6th century BC to Tibet, China, Mongolia, Korea and Sri Lanka, carried over by the Buddhist monks travelling to those lands. Although not much of it survives in original form, its effects can be seen in the various new age concepts that have originated from there.

 

No philosophy has had greater influence on Ayurveda than Sankhaya’s philosophy of creation and manifestation. Which professes that behind all creation there is a state of pure existence or awareness, which is beyond time and space, has no beginning or end, and no qualities. Within pure existence, there arises a desire to experience itself, which results in disequilibrium and causes the manifestation of the primordial physical energy. And the two unite to make the "dance of creation" come alive.

 

Imponderable, indescribable and extremely subtle, this primordial energy – which and all that flows from it existing only in pure existence – is the creative force of all action, a source of form that has qualities. Matter and energy are so closely related that when energy takes form, we tend to think of it in terms of matter only. And much modified, it ultimately leads to the manifestation of our familiar mental and physical worlds.

 

It also gives rise to cosmic consciousness, which is the universal order that prevades all life. Individual intelligence, as distinct from the everyday intellectual mind, is derived from and is part of this consciousness. It is the inner wisdom, the part of individuality that remains unswayed by the demands of daily life, or by Ahamkara, the sense of `I-ness’.

 

A Sanskrit word with no exact translation, Ahamkara, is a concept not quite understood by everyone as it is often misleadingly equated to `ego’. Embracing much more than just that, it is in essence that part of ‘me’ which knows which parts of the universal creation are ‘me’. Since ‘I’ am not separate from the universal consciousness, but ‘I’ has an identity that differentiates and defines the boundaries of `me’. All creations therefore have Ahamkara, not just human beings.

 

There arises from Ahamkara a two-fold creation. The first is Satwa, the subjective world, which is able to perceive and manipulate matter. It comprises the subtle body (the mind), the capacity of the five sense organs to hear, feel, see, taste and smell, and for the five organs of action to speak, grasp, move, procreate and excrete. The mind and the subtle organs providing the bridge between the body, the Ahamkara and the inner wisdom, which three together is considered the essential nature of humans.

 

The second is Tamas, the objective world of the five elements of sound, touch, vision, taste and smell – the five subtle elements that give rise to the dense elements of ether or space, air, fire, water and the earth – from which all matter of the physical world is derived. And it is Rajas, the force or the energy of movement, which brings together parts of these two worlds.

 

It is worth noting that even at the stage of the dense elements the philosophy of creation –which according to Sankaya is now and in the present, without any past and any future – is still dealing with aspects of existence beyond our simple physical realms. The point of contention being that we are the first and foremost spirit experiencing existence. To use Ayurveda in daily life, one has neither to accept nor even understand this philosophy. But it does provide a deeper insight into how Ayurveda works towards betterment of your health.

 

Ayurveda therefore is not simply a health care system but a form of lifestyle adopted to maintain perfect balance and harmony within the human existence, from the most abstract transcendental values to the most concrete physiological expressions. Based on the premise that life represents an intelligent co-ordination of the Atma (Soul), Mana (Mind), Indriya (Senses) and Sharira (Body). That revolves around the five dense elements that go into the making of the constitution of each individual, called Prakriti. Which in turn is determined by the vital balance of the three physical energies - Vata, Pitta, Kapha and the three mental energies - Satwa, Rajas,

 

Ayurveda thus offers a unique blend of science and philosophy that balances the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual components necessary for holistic health.

 

 

(See also: Ayurveda, Ayurveda, Ayurvedic Dictionary, Alternative Health, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia II - Vedic civilization - Overview

The reconstruction of the history of Vedic India is based on text-internal evidence, and on matching information from the texts with archaeological evidence. Linguistically, the Vedic texts could be classified in five chronological strata: Rigvedic. The Rigveda is by far the most archaic of the Vedic texts preserved, and it retains many common Indo-Iranian elements, both in language and in content, that are not present in any other Vedic texts. Its creation must have taken place over several centuries, and apart from the ...

See also:

Vedic civilization, Vedic civilization - Overview, Vedic civilization - Rigvedic period, Vedic civilization - Political organization, Vedic civilization - Society and economy, Vedic civilization - Vedic Religion, Vedic civilization - The later Vedic period, Vedic civilization - Kingdoms, Vedic civilization - Society

Read more here: » Vedic civilization: Encyclopedia II - Vedic civilization - Overview

Atharvaveda: Encyclopedia II - History of Early Hinduism - At the birth of Hinduism

Hinduism was born out of the very complex, controversial, humane and violent dynamics of the ancient peoples of India. It involved spirituality, materialism, politics, war and scientific pursuit. History of Early Hinduism - The Aryans of India and Iran. See Also: Aryan, Indo-Aryan, Indo-Iranian, Aryan Invasion Theory History of Early Hinduism - The Indus Valley Civilization. See Also: Indus Valley Civilization History of Early ...

See also:

History of Early Hinduism, History of Early Hinduism - Analyzing the History, History of Early Hinduism - At the birth of Hinduism, History of Early Hinduism - The Aryans of India and Iran, History of Early Hinduism - The Indus Valley Civilization, History of Early Hinduism - Influences of the Indus Valley and Dravidian People, History of Early Hinduism - The Indigenous Peoples within India, History of Early Hinduism - Composition of the Vedas, History of Early Hinduism - From the Ancient Vedic Religion, History of Early Hinduism - Influences from the Indus Valley, History of Early Hinduism - The Classical Age: Ramayana and Mahabharata

Read more here: » History of Early Hinduism: Encyclopedia II - History of Early Hinduism - At the birth of Hinduism




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