Tirtha

Tirtha Tirtha (तीर्थ, IAST: Tīrtha) is a Sanskrit word that means “crossing place, ford”, and refers to any place, text or person that is holy. It particularly refers to pilgrimage sites and holy places in Hinduism as well as Jainism. The process or journey associated with Tirtha is called Tirtha-yatra, while alternate terms such as Kshetra, Gopitha and Mahalaya are used in some Hindu traditions to…

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Tapati

TapatiTapati (Sanskrit: तपती, tapatī), as mentioned in Mahabharata, is a daughter of Surya (the Sun god) and Chhaya one of the wife’s of surya, sister of Savitri and the wife of Samvarana, and the mother of Kuru, the founder of Kuru dynasty. Tapati name literally means the “warming”, “the hot one”, “burning one”. It had been said that no…

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Takshaka

Takshaka was one of the Nagas mentioned in the epic Mahābhārata. He lived in a city named Takshasila, which was the new territory of Takshaka after his race was banished by Pandavas led by Arjuna from the Khandava Forest and Kurukshetra, where they built their new kingdom. Takshaka is mentioned…

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Time

Time (Kala) Vedic and Puranic texts describe units of Time (Kala) measurements, from Paramaṇu (about 17 microseconds) to Manvantara (311.04 trillion years). According to these texts, the creation and destruction of the universe is a cyclic process, which repeats itself forever. Each cycle starts with the birth and expansion (lifetime)…

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