This page has links to encyclopedia entries and topic page articles in the library's online reference collection, Credo Reference. If you can't find what you're looking for on this page, try a search below.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary In southern India, Caitra Purnima is a time for Hindus to worship Chitra Gupta, also known as “the scribe of the gods.” Tradition holds that while Brahma was meditating, Chitra Gupta was brought into being.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary The festival in Calcutta, India, in the state of West Bengal, honors Durga, who rides a lion and destroys demons. She is one aspect of the Mother Goddess and the personification of energy, and is famous for slaying the buffalo demon, Mahisasura.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary In Hinduism, a guru is a personal teacher or guide who has already attained spiritual insight.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary Holi is a colorful and boisterous Hindu spring festival in India, also known as the Festival of Colors.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary Hindus celebrate Kartika Purnima in honor of the day when God incarnated himself as the Matsya Avatar in fish form.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary
The Kumbh Mela involves mass immersion rituals by Hindus near the city of Allahabad (the ancient holy city of Prayag) in the north-central state of Uttar Pradesh, India.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary Like Kartika Purnima, this is a Hindu bathing festival. Magha is considered to be one of the four most sacred months, and Hindus believe that bathing in the Ganges on this day is a great purifying act.
From Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary The Hindu festival of Dussehra (see Durga Puja), observed on the 10th day of the waxing half of Asvina, celebrates the victory of the legendary hero Rama over the demon Ravana.
From Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth Amrita ('immortal') was the food of the gods. In early Vedic accounts, by the Aryan people who invaded India in the seventeenth century BCE, it was the same thing as soma. But in later, Hindu myth it was created by the gods themselves.
From Bloomsbury Guide to Human Thought Ashrams are quite different from Buddhist or western-Christian monasteries. Essentially they are communities which grow up around a religious figure.
From Dictionary of Hindu Lore and Legend Closely connected to the Atharvaveda, the Ayurveda is a work on medicine attributed to the mythical Dhanvantari, the physician of the gods.
From Dictionary of Hindu Lore and Legend discus, wheel’. A weapon consisting of a steel ring with a sharp edge. In Buddhism and Jainism, the chakra represents the law.
From The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy Sanskrit term meaning ‘concentration’, ‘absorption’, ‘superconscious state’, ‘altered state of consciousness’. In India’s philosophical tradition this term was made famous by its use in the Yoga system of Patañjali (second century B.C.).
From Chamber's Dictionary of the Unexplained An intoxicating plant-juice drink offered to the gods and drunk as a sacrament in Hindu Vedic rituals. The plant and the drink made from it are personified as a god, although the identity of the plant originally used, as described in the Rig-Veda, is unknown.
From The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy a single verse or aphorism of Hindu or Buddhist teaching, or a collection of them. Written to be memorized, they provide a means of encoding and transmitting laws and rules of grammar, ritual, poetic meter, and philosophical disputation.
In both Hinduism and Buddhism, esoteric tradition of ritual and yoga known for elaborate use of mantra, or symbolic speech, and mandala, or symbolic diagrams.
One of the six classical systems of Indian philosophy. The term "Vedanta" has the literal meaning "the end of the Veda" and refers both to the teaching of the Upanishads, which constitute the last section of the Veda, and to the knowledge of its ultimate meaning.
[Skt.,=union], general term for spiritual disciplines in Hinduism, Buddhism, and throughout S Asia that are directed toward attaining higher consciousness.