Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Drona" ¶ 71
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Wikisource and Book
* The Book of Mormon at Wikisource
* Book of Joshua at Wikisource.
* Wikisource: 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica: Domesday Book
* Book seven of the Ginza Rba-The John-Book / Book of John the Baptist / Words of John the Baptist / Q Source-English Translation on Wikisource
* The Book of on Wikisource
* Wikisource translation of Amores, Book One
* The Book of on Wikisource

Wikisource and 1
1, S. 14, 15, at Wikisource ( German ).
The oath, as it appears in the Wikisource translation of Romance of the Three Kingdoms / Chapter 1, was this:
1, 400 public domain French texts were added to the Wikisource library as a result via upload to the Wikimedia Commons.
* Megara: a neighbour and historically a rival to Athens, it is mentioned in line 57 as the reputed origin of comic drama .< ref > Poetics by Aristotle, 1448 < sup > a </ sup > 31 ; Wikisource section III s: The Poetics translated by Bywater / 1 # III
The following was extracted from Avadhuta Gita 1. 25 on Wikisource:
The Introduction and volumes 1 – 6 are available as texts on Wikisource.
The following was extracted from Avadhuta Gita 1. 25 on Wikisource:

Wikisource and /
* Wikisource: Prose Edda / Gylfaginning ( The Fooling Of Gylfe ) by Sturluson, Snorri, 13th century Edda, in English.
* Wikisource: The New Student's Reference Work / The Balkans and the Peace of Europe
* Wikisource: Prose Edda / Gylfaginning ( The Fooling Of Gylfe ) by Sturluson, Snorri, 13th century Edda, in English.
* Henry Charles Lea, The history of the Inquisition of Spain, ( Macmillan, 1906 – 07 ) Wikisource: A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages / Volume I
* Sthenelus: A tragic poet, whose verse was later considered by Aristotle to be lucid but undignified ,< ref > Poetics 1458 < sup > a </ sup > 18-21 Wikisource section XXII s: The Poetics translated by Bywater / 3 # XXII he is mentioned in line 1313 as the epitome of a man who is lacking something.

Mahabharata and Book
* Lineage of Daksha, The Mahabharata / Book 1: Adi Parva / Section LXV
The Mahabharata translated by Kisari Mohan Ganguli ( 1883-1896 ), Book 2: Sabha Parva: Lokapala Sabhakhayana Parva, section: XI.
The Mahabharata ( Book I: Adi Parva, Section 154 ) describes him as a cruel cannibal with sharp, long teeth and prodigious strength.
Examples of such epics include the Nibelungenlied of the Germanic people, the Iliad for the Ancient Greeks and Hellenized societies, the Silappadhikaram of the South Indian people, the Ramayana and Mahabharata of the North Indian people, the Gilgamesh of the Mesopotamian-Sumerian civilization and the people of the Fertile Crescent at large, The Book of One Thousand and One Nights ( Arabian nights ) of the Arab world and the Sundiata epic of the Mandé people.
According to the story set forth in the Ramayana and ( in an abbreviated version ) in the Mahabharata ( Book III: Varna Parva, Section 271 ff.
Markandeya's narration of the story begins at Book III ( Varna Parva ), Section 271 of the Mahabharata.
In the Mahabharata, the sacrifice is performed by Yudhishtira ( Book 14 ), his brothers guarding the horse as it roamed into neighbouring kingdoms.
The Udyoga Parva Book of the Mahabharata narrates that the creator-god Brahma drank so much Amrita that he vomited some of it, from which emerged Surabhi.
The Mahabharata Book 2: Sabha Parva SECTION XXXI locates Trigartas along with Dasharnas, the Sivis, the Amvashtas, the Malavas, the five tribes of the Karnatas around Rohtak in Haryana as under:
* Mahabharata, Book III: Vana Parva, Section 278: online text for the section of the Mahabharata describing Rama's alliance with Sugriva and the killing of Bali.
The best-known version is from Book 13 of the Mahabharata.
* The Mahabharata, Volume 2: Book 2 ; Book 3: 1981, J.
* The Mahabharata: Book 11: The Book of Peace, Part 1, edited by James L Fitzgerald
Bhadu has been mentioned as Bhadraka ( भद ् रक ) in Sabha Parva, Mahabharata / Book II Chapter 13, who fled towards the west from the fear of Jarasandha along with the eighteen tribes of the Bhojas ; the Surasenas, the Vodhas, the Salwas, the Patachcharas, the Susthalas, the Mukuttas, and the Kulindas, and the Kuntis.
Bhisma Parva, Mahabharata / Book VI Chapter 47 has mentioned them as Panibhadraka ( पण ि भद ् रक ), who assembled there for battle to protect Bhishma with their ( respective ) troops.
Bhisma Parva, Mahabharata / Book VI Chapter 52 has mentioned them as Prabhadraka ( परभद ् रक ) who sided with Kauravasalong with Panchala tribe ( VI. 52. 14 ).

Mahabharata and 1
This view is clearly expressed in the Mahabharata, the Bhagavata Purana ( 11. 5. 13 – 14 ), and the Chandogya Upanishad ( 8. 15. 1 ).
About 1. 8 million words in total, the Mahabharata is roughly ten times the length of the Iliad and Odyssey combined, or about four times the length of the Ramayana.
The Mahabharata itself ( 1. 1. 61 ) distinguishes a core portion of 24, 000 verses, the Bharata proper, as opposed to additional secondary material, while the Ashvalayana Grhyasutra ( 3. 4. 4 ) makes a similar distinction.
Performances of the Ashvamedha feature in the epics Ramayana ( 1. 10 – 15 ) and Mahabharata.
The Vishnusahasranama as found in the Shanti Parva of the Mahabharata is the most popular version of the 1, 000 names of Vishnu.
A long term project under the auspices of BORI, started on April 1, 1919, was the preparation of a Critical Edition of the Mahabharata.
# Mahabharata Part 1
Mahabharata also has another passage where describing how the surrounding forest of Khandava was burnt by Krishna and Arjuna ( Mbh 1. 229 ):- Arjuna covered the forest of Khandava with innumerable arrows like a thick fog.
The following passage in Mahabharata narrates how a wonderful palatial hall was constructed by Asura architect Maya in the area cleared by burning the forest ( MBh 2. 1, 3 )
According to the Ashtadhyayi ( IV. 1. 114 ) of Panini, the Andhakas were of the Kshatriya gotra, having a sangha ( tribal oligarchy ) form of government In the Drona Parva ( 141. 15 ) of the Mahabharata, Andhakas were categorized as the Vratyas ( deviators from orthodoxy ).
Although, Panini, in his Ashtadhyayi ( IV. 1. 114 ) includes the Vrishnis in the list of the clans of the Kshatriya gotra, having a sangha ( tribal oligarchy ) form of government, but in the Drona Parva ( 141. 15 ) of the Mahabharata, the Vrishnis, like the Andhakas were categorized as the Vratyas ( deviators from orthodoxy ).

0.235 seconds.