Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Baudhayana

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-95 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Baudhayana:     more books (41)
  1. The Sacred Laws Of The Aryas As Taught In The Schools Of Apastamba, Gautama, Vasishtha And Baudhayana
  2. The sacred laws of the Aryas: as taught in the schools of Apastamba, Gautama, Vasishtha and Baudhayana by Georg Bühler, 2010-08-06
  3. Baudhayana Srautasutra. Volumes I; II; III; IV. FOUR VOLUME SET
  4. The Sacred Books Of The Aryas, Part 1, Apastamba And Gautama: As Taught In The Schools Of Apastamba, Gautama, Vasishtha, And Baudhayana (1879)
  5. The Baudhayanadharmasastra; The Pitrmedhasutras Of Baudhayana, Hiranyakesin, Gautama; Uber Das Rituelle Sutra Des Baudhayana (1884)
  6. The Sacred Books of the East: Volume 2. The Sacred Laws of the Âryas as Taught in the Schools of Âpastamba, Gautama, Vâsishtha, and Baudhâyana. Part 1 by Friedrich Max Müller, 2000-11-29
  7. The Sacred Laws of the Âryas As Taught in the Schools of Âpastamba, Guatama, Visishtha, and Baudhâyana: Vâsishtha and Baudhâyana by Georg Bühler, Apastamba Apastamba, 2010-04-20
  8. The Sacred Books of the East: Volume 14. The Sacred Laws of the âryas as Taught in the Schools of âpastamba, Gautama, Vâsishtha, and Baudhâyana. Part 2 by Friedrich Max Müller, 2001-02-22
  9. Dharmasutras: The Law Codes of Apastamba, Gautama, Baudhayana, and Vasistha (Sources on ancient Hindu law)
  10. The Sacred Books of the East. Volume 2. The Sacred Laws of the åryas as Taught in the Schools of åpastamba, Gautama, Vâsishtha, and Baudhâyana. Part 1 by Friedrich Max Müller, 1879-01-01
  11. Baudhayana
  12. The Sacred Laws Of The Aryas As Taught In The Schools Of Apastamba, Gautama, Vasishtha And Baudhayana
  13. The Sacred Laws of the Aryas as Taught in the Schools of Apastamba, Gautama, Vasishtha, and Baudhayana. Part 1. Apastamba and Gautama. Part 2. Vasishtha and Baudhayana. by Georg, tr. Buhler, 1898-01-01
  14. The Sacred Laws Of The Aryas As Taught In The Schools Of Apastamba, Gautama, Vasishtha And Baudhayana

81. Antiquity
DharmasUtras. The law codes of Apastamba, Gautama, baudhayana, and VasiSTa,transl. Patrick OLIVELLE (1999), Oxford Oxford UP. xlvi + 434 pp.
http://www.sign-lang.uni-hamburg.de/bibweb/Miles/Antiquity.html
Antiquity
ABRAMS, Judith Z. (1998) Judaism and Disability: portrayals in ancient texts from the Tanach through the Bavli. Washington DC: Gallaudet University. xi + 236 pp. isbn 1-56368-068-8. Detailed, well referenced review of disabilities in texts from c. 1000 BC to the 7th century CE, the later parts being developed by Jewish scholars in communities dispersed in South West Asia. See many index entries under cheresh ("persons with hearing and speaking disabilities"). There was some legal provision that "A cheresh [may transact business by] gestures and be communicated with by gestures," or by lip movements (p. 184). ALSTER, Bendt (1997) Proverbs of Ancient Sumer. The world's earliest proverb collections . 2 vols, Bethesda, Md.: CDL Press. Dated before 2500 BC, the collections appear in vol. I in Roman transliteration and probable English translation; vol. II provides commentary, glossary and plates. Proverbs pertinent to deafness, dumbness or hearing loss are numbered: 2.61 "(If) the hearing of the fox is bad, its feet will be crushed" (ditto P374, on p.334, comments in II: 366); 3.138 "He who entered Elam, his mouth is bound" (and II: p. 390); 5.57 "After a lion had caught a 'bush-pig', he roared, 'Until now your flesh has not filled my mouth, but your squeals have made me deaf!'"; UET 6/2 339 "Deaf, ... above you, my son is not fit for a scribe." (II: p. 474). The first (2.61) refers to the need for vigilance. The second (3.138) may refer to difficulties of trade when there is no common language. The meaning of the incomplete fourth item is not yet known.

82. Luckyfortune Lottery And Lotto Winning Reports
The Formula known today as the Pythagorean Theorem was first postulated by Indianmathematician baudhayana in the 6th century CE long before Europe's math
http://www.luckyfortune.com/numerology/
Luckyfortune Numerology Report 4 you
Go to
HOME Lotto Report Lottery Report ... What is Numerology? Personal
Numerology
Astrological
Reports
Present Future Relationships Business Your Numerology Profile Your Cost ONLY -
$11.00 - Includes 6 month Forecast Report
$14.00 - 12 months Forecast report
[Discounted price]
FREE LUCKY GIFT WITH year REPORT- scroll down
[Get 50% off for additional report] What is Numerology Profile
Luckyfortune
Numerology Report for John Doe
Luckyfortune Numerology report is customized, designed to provide very detailed and comprehensive personal analysis of your physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual personality. Based exclusively on your birthdata and Full name, luckyfortune numerology report uses ancient methodology of Pythagorean numerlogy. This amazingly accurate and very interesting report consists your Life Cycle and major life period numbers, as well as the current year and monthly number cycles. Get ready to be surprised that just by your birth data and name, so much information on you could be calculated.
  • There is an option of selecting forecast for 6 months or 12 months.

83. Indian History, Orissa, Ashokan, Kalingan, Culture, Religion, Trade, Arts, Craft
In the 6th C. BC, Vedic Sutrakara baudhayana mentions Kalinga as being beyond theVedic fold, indicating that Brahminical influences had not yet touched the
http://india_resource.tripod.com/orissa.html
Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated SOUTH ASIAN HISTORY Pages from the history of India and the sub-continent The History of Orissa: An Introduction The history of Orissa makes an interesting case-study in that it's history is in many ways atypical from that of the northern plains and many of the common generalizations that are made about Indian history do not seem to apply to the Oriya region. The word Oriya is an anglicised version of Odia which itself is a modern name for the Odra or Udra tribes that inhabited the central belt of modern Orissa. Orissa has also been the home of the Kalinga and Utkal tribes that played a particularly prominent role in the region's history, and one of the earliest references to the ancient Kalingas appears in the writings of Vedic chroniclers. In the 6th C. BC, Vedic Sutrakara Baudhayana mentions Kalinga as being beyond the Vedic fold, indicating that Brahminical influences had not yet touched the land. Unlike some other parts of India, tribal customs and traditions played a significant role in shaping political structures and cultural practices right up to the 15th C. when Brahminical influences triumphed over competing traditions and caste differentiation began to inhibit social mobility and erode what had survived of the ancient republican tradition. Kalinga Very early in Kalingan history, the Kalingas acquired a reputation for being a fiercely independant people. Ashoka's military campaign against Kalinga

84. Table Of Contents -- Mahfil/Journal Of South Asian Literature -- Digital South A
Applied To Kalidasa's Kumarasambhava Canto VIII p. 129 Sketch Kalidasa's Springp. 143 Some Afterthoughts On A Production Of baudhayana's The Hermit And The
http://dsal.uchicago.edu/books/mahfil/toc.html?volume=7

85. World's First Voice Enabled Indian Entertainment Portal
besides juridical matters. The more important of these texts arethe sutras of Gautama, baudhayana, and Apastamba. The contents
http://www.telugutoranam.com/hinduism/index.php3?slide=shastras

86. History, Scientific Terms, Nomenclature, Etc. - Numericana
have been recorded as the authors of Indian Sulbasutras (the geometrical rules appendedto the Vedas for the construction of religious altars) baudhayana (fl.
http://home.att.net/~numericana/answer/culture.htm
home index units counting ... physics
Final Answers
, Ph.D.
History and Nomenclature

87. Itihaas: Ancient: Contribution: Demise Of Aryan Invasion/Race Theory-I
entire population. Even in the ancient times some of the great Sutraauthors like baudhayana and Apastamba were from South. Agastya
http://www.itihaas.com/ancient/contrib1.html
Contribution Demise of Aryan Invasion/Race Theory-Part 1 Prof. Dinesh Agrawal
Address: 156 Aberdeen lane, State College, PA 16801 USA
Tel: (814)-234-3558 (Home), (814)-863-8034 (Office) Aryan Race and Invasion Theory is not a subject of academic interest only, rather it conditions our perception of India's historical evolution, the sources of her ancient glorious heritage, and indigenous socio-economic-political institutions which have been developed over the millennia. Indian culture and nationalism have been evolved and fostered over the millenia by India's ancient rishis who at the banks of holy rivers of Saptasindhuand Saraswati had composed the Vedic literature - the very foundation of Indian civilization, and realized the eternal truths about the Creator, His creation, and means to preserve it. These pioneers of the ancient Vedic culture were indigenous people of mother India, this fact is mendaciously denied by the Aryan Invasion theory which professes their foreign origin, and thereby challenges the very raison d'etre of Indian culture and nationhood. In this article an attempt has been made to expose the myth of Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT) by quoting scriptural, historical and archaeological evidences, and presenting proper interpretation of Vedic literature.

88. Books Of Kalamulasastra Series
Editor / Translator Dr. HG Ranade. baudhayanasrauta-sutra, A srautatext. Editor / Translator Dr. TN Dharmadhikari, Prof. CG Kashikar.
http://ignca.nic.in/kkmllist.htm

89. Ikari - Institute For Research In Humanities, Kyoto Univ.
?, pp.37348. 1983, baudhayana Srautasutra X on theAgnicayana, an annotated translation. Agni The Vedic Ritual of
http://www.zinbun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/staff/ikari.html
ÅV u‰‰‰ï o”Å•¨ ƒA[ƒJƒCƒu l•¶ŠwŒ¤‹†•”F ŒÂlŒ¤‹† @“Œ•ûŠwŒ¤‹†•”F ŒÂlŒ¤‹†
l•¶ŠwŒ¤‹†•”‚̌lŒ¤‹†
IKARI, Yasuke 1940”N¶
A Study of Agnicayana: Ukhasambharana, Ph. D. Dissertation. The University of Chicago. wƒXƒŠƒ‰ƒ“ƒJ‚̍Ձxi‹¤’˜j HìŽÉ National Museum of Ethnology. From Vedic Altar to Village Shrines, Towards an Interface between Indology and Anthropology, (Senri Ethnological Studies No.36).i‹¤•Ò’˜j ‘—§–¯‘°Šw”Ž•¨ŠÙ A Study of the Nllamata, Aspects of Hinduism in Ancient Kashmii•Ò’˜j ‹ž“s‘åŠwl•¶‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†Š Žå—v˜_•¶ uƒAƒOƒjƒ`ƒƒƒ„ƒiÕŽ®‚ÆŒEƒpƒjƒVƒƒƒbƒhv w@‹³Œ¤‹†x225 pp.51-73 uƒA[ƒpƒXƒ^ƒ“ƒoEƒVƒ…ƒ‹ƒoƒX[ƒgƒ‰i–󒍁A‰ðàjv wƒCƒ“ƒh“V•¶ŠwE”ŠwWxi‰ÈŠw‚Ì–¼’˜‡Tj’©“úo”ÅŽÐ pp.373-48 Baudhayana Srautasutra X on the Agnicayana, an annotated translation. Agni : The Vedic Ritual of the Fire Altar Vol.II,
Asian Humanities Press, Berkeley pp.478-675. wl•¶Šw•ñx60
‹ž“s‘åŠwl•¶‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†Š pp.189-202 u—Ö‰ô‚ƋƁv wŠâ”guÀE“Œ—mŽv‘z@‘æ‚UŠª@ƒCƒ“ƒhŽv‘z‚QxŠâ”g‘“X pp.276-306 Some Aspects of the Idea of Rebirth in Vedic Literatures. Studies in the History of Indian Thought 6 pp.155-164.

90. Indian Text Survey | Title Index
Chandogya Upanishad (CdU); Dharma Sûtras Apastamba (ApD); Gautama (GtD);baudhayana (BdD); Vasistha (VsD). DighaNikaya (Dgn); Dipavamsa (Dpv
http://www.umass.edu/wsp/survey/apparatus/title.html
Indian Text Survey
Title List
These are the texts and text groups so far included in the Survey. For a different mode of access to the material, see the systematic Overview. Nontextual Evidence which supplements the basic textual argument is listed separately. The Chronology page gives an organized summary of our relative datings. A complementary listing by reference code will be found on the Abbreviations page.
  • Arthashastra (ArS)
    • Kau t (a separate on-line publication)
    A s okan Inscriptions Ash t Brhad-Aranyaka Upanishad (BrU)
    • Core Text
    Chandogya Upanishad (CdU)
    • Apastamba (ApD) Gautama (GtD) Baudhayana (BdD) Vasistha (VsD)
    Digha-Nikaya (Dgn) Dipavamsa (Dpv)
Indian Text Survey Comments to The Authors / Exit to Project Home Page

91. Books On Hinduism
The following are a selection of books on Hinduism published in India. Please click on the hyperlink "Details" to see complete table of contents and excerpts from the jacket/preface of that particular book. If you are looking for a particular title
http://www.vedamsbooks.com/Hinduism.htm
The following are a selection of books on Hinduism published in India. Please click on the hyperlink "Details" to see complete table of contents and excerpts from the jacket/preface of that particular book. If you are looking for a particular title, and you do not find it here, please e-mail us the details of the title at vedams@vedamsbooks.com and we shall procure it for you. We can supply you any title published in India by any publisher. All books are in hardcover unless specified pbk (for paper back edition)
New additions of February, 2003 The Artful Universe : An Introduction to the Vedic Religious Imagination/William K. Mahony. Delhi, Sri Satguru, 2002, xii, 325 p., $20(pbk). ISBN 81-7030-767-8. (Sri Garib Das Oriental Series No. 272). Details No. 30282 Bhakti : The Religion of Love/B. Bhattacharya. New Delhi, UBS, 2003, xii, 318 p., $20. ISBN 81-7476-437-2. Details No. 30196 Crisis and Knowledge : The Upanishadic Experience and Storytelling/Yohanan Grinshpon. New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2003, xiv, 146 p., $20. ISBN 019-566119-2.

92. ORALITY VS
ORALITY vs. WRITTEN TEXT MEDIAEVAL DEVELOPMENTS IN VEDIC RITUAL LITERATURE
http://haldjas.folklore.ee/folklore/vol8/veda.htm
ORALITY vs. WRITTEN TEXT: MEDIAEVAL DEVELOPMENTS IN VEDIC RITUAL LITERATURE
Klaus Karttunen In this article my intention is to discuss in a general way the somewhat obscure period of Indian literary and religious history falling between the last phase of the creation of commonly recognised Vedic literature (the Sm r ti part of it) and the beginnings of the modern scholarship dealing with it. In short - the mediaeval period. However, there is an inherent danger in using schematic terms of periodisation, especially when originally brought from a different geographic context. Therefore I must first try to define somewhat more exactly what I here understand under the notion of mediaevalism. A concept like the Middle Ages is not very precise, even in European circumstances, and when applied to India it has a different meaning. In history, the concept of Indian Middle Ages is mostly used as roughly corresponding the early (pre-Mughal) Islamic period, sometimes also including the period immediately preceding the Islamic conquest. In literature and religion, such a distinction as mediaeval, if used at all, must be stated differently. A text written in Sanskrit is often styled as ancient or classical, even when it is probably composed well into the second millennium A.D. In addition, there are fairly modern Sanskrit texts, and it is difficult to say where the borderline should be drawn.

93. Internet For Girls World Wide Web Resource List
Internet for Girls World Wide Web Resource List This list contains resources in mathematics and science, parent resources, teacher resources, and sites created especially for women and girls.
http://www.sdsc.edu/~woodka/resources.html
Internet for Girls: World Wide Web Resource List
This list contains resources in mathematics and science, parent resources, teacher resources, and sites created especially for women and girls. The list is a representative sampling of what is available on the World Wide Web. New resources and web sites are bring added continually, and updated on an almost daily basis in many cases. Please let me know if you encounter an out-of-date link. Please let me know if you know of resources I need to include. Thank You!
Animals, Animals, Animals!
American Zoo and Aquarium Association
Zoos and Aquariums of AZA
Official site of the American Zoo and Aquarium Association and its Member Institutions. The site provides information about the many zoos and aquariums of the AZA throughout North America, and their many conservation programs.
Zoological Society of San Diego
San Diego Zoo
The Zoological Society of San Diego is a private, nonprofit organization, dedicated to increasing understanding and appreciation for the inherent worth of all life-forms and promoting conservation of the Earth's wildlife. Each year more than 4.5 million individuals visit the Zoo and Park to enjoy the beauty, rarity, and diversity of its collections.
ZooNet
ZooNet
Back online after a long absence, Zoonet is a terrifc resource. In late 1994 Jim Henley created ZooNet with the primary purpose of making Zoos, first in the USA, then World Wide, available through the World Wide Web (WWW). "As a father, educator and Net Surfer I saw a need to aid Parents and Educators in helping them locate information for their children and students on the WWW, in my case I zeroed in on Zoos. If you are a Net Surfer yourself you know how difficult and time consuming locating topics on the WWW can be. ZooNet is an attempt to provide a single point of entry to ALL ZOOS EVERYWHERE." Jim Henley

94. J. Patrick Olivelle CV

http://inic.utexas.edu/asnic/pages/facultyCVs/JPO/jpocv.html
CURRICULUM VITAE
J. Patrick Olivelle
ADDRESS

    Department of Asian Studies, Mail Code G9300, University of Texas,
    Austin, TX 78712.
    Tel. (512) 471-5811
    Fax: 512-471-4469
    e-mail: jpo@uts.cc.utexas.edu
EDUCATION
    University of Pennsylvania: Ph.D. (History of Indian Religions), 1974.
    University of Oxford, England: B.A. Honors (Sanskrit and Pali), First Class, 1972; M.A. 1977. Urban University, Rome: License in Theology, summa cum laude, 1967. Urban University, Rome: Baccalaureate in Theology, summa cum laude, 1965. Urban University, Rome: License in Philosophy, summa cum laude, 1963. Urban University, Rome: Baccalaureate in Philosophy, summa cum laude, 1962.
HONORS
    Guggenheim Fellowship, 1996-97 Christie and Stanley E. Adams, Jr. Centennial Professorship in Liberal Arts, 1998. Association for Asian Studies, A. K. Ramanujan Translation Award, 1998, for Upanisads General Editor of book series "Sources of Indian Law" published by Motilal Banarsidass, the major Indological publisher in India. Delivered "Mircea Eliade Lectures in Comparative Religion" at University of Western Michigan, 1997.

95. 21A1.Riddles In Hinduism PART I
Riddle In Hinduism. . Contents.PART I RELIGIOUS. Riddle No. 1 The difficulty of knowing why one is a Hindu.
http://www.dr-ambedkar.com/thoughts/21A1.Riddles in Hinduism PART I.htm
Riddle In Hinduism Contents PART I - RELIGIOUS Riddle No. 1 : The difficulty of knowing why one is a Hindu Riddle No. 3 : The Testimony Of Other Shastras On The Origin Of The Vedas Riddle no. 4 : Why suddenly the brahmins declare the vedas to be infallible and not to be questioned? Riddle no. 5 : ...
PART III - POLITICAL
RI DDLE No. 1 THE DIFFICULTY OF KNOWING WHY ONE IS A HINDU India is a conjeries of communities. There are in it Parsis, Christians, Mohammedans and Hindus. The basis of these communities is not racial. It is of course religious. This is a superficial view. What is interesting to know is why is a Parsi a Parsi and why is a Christian a Christian, why is a Muslim a Muslim and why is a Hindu a Hindu? With regard to the Parsi, the Christian and the Muslim it is smooth sailing. Ask a Parsi why he calls himself a Parsi he will have no difficulty in answering the question. He will say he is a Parsi because he is a follower of Zoraster. Ask the same question to a Christian. He too will have no difficulty in answering the question. He is a Christian because he believes in Jesus Christ. Put the same question to a Muslim. He too will have no hesitation in answering it. He will say he is a believer in Islam and that is why he is a Muslim.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-95 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

free hit counter