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Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary

A Wisdom Archive on Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary

A selection of articles related to Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary

We recommend this article: Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary - 1, and also this: Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary - 2.
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Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary

ARTICLES RELATED TO Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Kalpa Vedanga

Kalpa Vedanga: (Sanskrit) "Procedural or ceremonial Veda-limb."

 

Also known as the Kalpa Sutras- a body of three groups of auxiliary Vedic texts:

1)    the Shrauta Sutras and Shulba Sutras, on public Vedic rites (yajna),

2)    the Grihya Sutras (or Shastras), on domestic rites and social custom, and

3)    the Dharma Shastras (or Sutras), on religious law. There are numerous sets of Kalpa Sutras, composed by various rishis. Each set is associated with one of the four Vedas.

See: Dharma Shastra, Grihya Sutras, Shulba Shastras, Shrauta Sutras, Vedangas.

(See also: Kalpa Vedanga , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Kalpa

kalpa: (Sanskrit) From krlip, "arranged, ordered."

1)    Rules for ceremony or sacred living, as in the Kalpa Vedanga.

2)    Determination or resolve, as in sankalpa.

3)    A vast period of time also known as a day of Brahma, equaling 994 mahayugas, or 4,294,080,000 years.

See: cosmic cycle, Kalpa Vedanga, sankalpa, yuga.

(See also: Kalpa , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Vedanga

Vedanga: (Sanskrit) "Veda-limb." Six branches of post- Vedic studies revered as auxiliary to the Vedas.

 

Four Vedangas govern correct chanting of the Vedas:

1)    Shiksha (phonetics),

2)    ‚handas (meter),

3)    Nirukta (etymology),

4)    Vyakarana (grammar). The two other Vedangas are

5)    )Jyotisha Vedanga (astronomy-astrology) and

6)    Kalpa Vedanga (procedural canon) which includes the Shrauta and Shulba Shastras (ritual codes), Dharma Shastras (social law) and Grihya Shastras (domestic codes).

 

See: Kalpa Vedanga, Vedas, and individual entries for named texts.

(See also: Vedanga , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Smriti

smriti: (Sanskrit) "That which is remembered; the tradition."

 

Hinduism's nonrevealed, secondary but deeply revered scriptures, derived from man's insight and experience. Smriti speaks of secular matters - science, law, history, agriculture, etc. - as well as spiritual lore, ranging from day-to-day rules and regulations to superconscious outpourings.

1)    The term smriti refers to a specific collection of ancient Sanskritic texts as follows: the six or more Vedangas, the four Upavedas, the two Itihasas, and the 18 main Puranas. Among the Vedangas, the Kalpa Vedanga defines codes of ritual in the Shrauta and Shulba Shastras, and domestic-civil laws in the Grihya and Dharma Shastras. Also included as classical smriti are the founding sutras of six ancient philosophies called shad darshana (Sankhya, Yoga, Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mimamsa and Vedanta).

2)    In a general sense, smriti may refer to any text other than shruti (revealed scripture) that is revered as scripture within a particular sect. From the vast body of sacred literature, shastra, each sect and school claims its own preferred texts as secondary scripture, e.g., the Ramayana of Vaishnavism and Smartism, or the Tirumurai of Saiva Siddhanta. Thus, the selection of smriti varies widely from one sect and lineage to another.

See: Mahabharata, Ramayana, Tirumurai.

(See also: Smriti , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Sai Baba Dictionary on Vedanga

Vedanga:

Vedanga: Veda-limb. Six branches of post-Vedic studies revered as auxiliary to the Vedas. Four Vedangas govern correct chanting of the Vedas: 1. Shiksha (phonetics), 2. Çhandas (meter), 3. Nirukta (etymology), 4. Vyakarana (grammar). The two other Vedangas are 5. Jyotisha Vedanga (astronomy-astrology) and 6. Kalpa Vedanga (procedural canon) which includes the Shrauta and Shulba Shastras (ritual codes), Dharma Shastras (social law) and Grihya Shastras (domestic codes).

 

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

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Grihya Sutras

Grihya Sutras: (Sanskrit) "Household maxims or codes." An important division of classical smriti literature, designating rules and customs for domestic life, including rites of passage and other home ceremonies, which are widely followed to this day.

 

The Grihya Sutras (or Shastras) are part of the Kalpa Sutras, "procedural maxims" (or Kalpa Vedanga), which also include the Shrauta and Shulba Shastras, on public Vedic rites, and the Dharma Shastras (or Sutras), on domestic-social law. Among the best known Grihya Sutras are Ashvalayana's Grihya Sutras attached to the Rig Veda, Gobhila's Sutras of the Sama Veda, and the Sutras of Paraskara and Baudhayana of the Yajur Veda.

See: Kalpa Vedanga, Vedanga.

(See also: Grihya Sutras , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Shulba Shastra

Shulba Shastra (Shulba Shastras): (Sanskrit) Practical manuals giving the measurements and procedures for constructing the sites of Vedic yajna rites.

 

A division of the Kalpa Vedanga (Veda limb on rituals), these sutras employ sophisticated geometry and are India's earliest extant mathematical texts. Shulba means "string or cord," denoting the use of string for measuring.

See: Vedanga.

(See also: Shulba Shastra , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Dharma Shastra

Dharma Shastra: (Sanskrit) "Religious law book."

 

A term referring to all or any of numerous codes of Hindu civil and social law composed by various authors. The best known and most respected are those by Manu and Yajnavalkya, thought to have been composed as early as 600 bce.

 

The Dharma Shastras, along with the Artha Shastras, are the codes of Hindu law, parallel to the Muslim Sharia, the Jewish Talmud, each of which provides guidelines for kings, ministers, judicial systems and law enforcement agencies. These spiritualparliamentary codes differ from British and American law, which separate religion from politics. (Contemporary British law is influenced by Anglican Christian thought, just as American democracy was, and is, profoundly affected by the philosophy of its non-Christian, Deistic founders.)

 

The Dharma Shastras also speak of much more, including creation, initiation, the stages of life, daily rites, duties of husband and wife, caste, Vedic study, penances and transmigration. The Dharma Shastras are part of the Smriti literature, included in the Kalpa Vedanga, and are widely available today in many languages.

See: Deism, Manu Dharma Shastras.

(See also: Dharma Shastra , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hindu - Hinduism Dictionary on Baudhayana Dharma Shastra

Baudhayana Dharma Shastra: (Sanskrit) A book of laws associated with the Krishna Yajur Veda and governing studentship, marriage, household rituals, civil law, etc. It is followed by brahmins of Southwest India. See: Dharma Shastra, Kalpa Vedanga.

(See also: Baudhayana Dharma Shastra , Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: Hinduism Lexicon on B

Hinduism Lexicon on B

From backbiting to buddhi chitta.

Read more here: » Hinduism: Hinduism Lexicon on B

Kalpa Vedanga Dictionary: The Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig Veda

The Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig Veda

Some scholars have claimed that the Babylonians invented the zodiac of 360 degrees around 700 BCE, perhaps even earlier. Many claim that India received the knowledge of the zodiac from Babylonia or even later from Greece. However, as old as the Rig Veda, the oldest Vedic text, there are clear references to a chakra or wheel of 360 spokes placed in the sky. The number 360 and its related numbers like 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72, 108, 432 and 720 occur commonly in Vedic symbolism. It is in the hymns of the great Rishi Dirghatamas (RV I.140 - 164) that we have the clearest such references.

 

Read more here: » Vedic Origins of the Zodiac: The Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig Veda

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