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This book, Messages from Mahabharat, presents the epic story of Mahabharat in simple English. After editing the Scriptures, the great sage created this wonderful epic to convey the underlying essence of Vedas using the story medium. Mahabharat is thus known as the ‘Panchama Vedam’, the fifth Veda. Addressing a group of scholar sages led by Kulapati Shounaka Maharshi, Ugrasravas, a talented storyteller, narrates the story of Mahabharat in the setting of a forest known as Naimisharanyam. The sages were conducting a long Yagnam. During one of the breaks of this Yagnam, they wanted to hear a new, unheard, enlightening and entertaining story. The epic unfolds a series of legendary events, culminating in the famed Kurukshetra War, and beyond. Running close to Vyasa’s original story, the book presents the entire epic story with all relevant features including many sub-stories and details of the eighteen-day war. Starting from the early origins of the Chandra Dynasty, the story revolves around the lives of the children of Kings Dhritarastra and Pandu. The detailed conduct of these main players and others portrays a wide spectrum of human behavioral traits.
The word Babri was literally used to define something abnormal, out of sense or mad. Three instances mentioned in Babar-Nama support this. Babars journal is replete with precise detail with a telling image or idiom as a bud resembling a sheeps heart, fell like water on fire which lingers in the readers mind long after the event or anecdote has receded. Few of the phrases and words in the Babar Nama are now part of everyday language in India and Pakistan as Namak Haram means lack of trustworthiness, hamesha means always, bakhshish means gift, maidan means plain area, julab means laxative and the most important, which is of our use here, is Babri/Baburi /Bavala means related to unhealthy menta...
Sri Chandrashekharendra Saraswati Mahaswamigal, fondly remembered as 'The Walking God' toured the length and breadth of India and delivered series of lectures which highlighted the importance of Spiritual life routed in Vedic Tradition . Many of his teachings appeals to a layman as well to a well versed scholar. This book is the fifth in the series of eight volumes of his lectures in English.
The book gives the chronology of some o the ancient historic events including rulers and ruling dynasties which are described in the puranas. The narrations in the puranas and other shastras are sacred narrations known as mythology. No claim is made that the dates given are true or historic in nature.
In this book, an attempt is made to provide a hybrid grand unified theory to understand the universe, both in its micro/quantum aspects as well as macro/galactic aspects. The book describes a truly hybrid theory as it encompasses both the modern and ancient theories of the universe, together with its functioning at all levels of human comprehension. One of its authors, Dr Escultura, was nominated in 2005 for a Nobel Prize for his flux theory of gravitation. From then on this theory has been improved, clarified and is now known as the hybrid grand unified theory. This book deals with this new bold theory, unifying mathematics and physics, and answering some open fundamental questions and paradoxes in these disciplines. The book also describes what the ancient scientists knew about these matters.
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Lagna Varahi written by the famous astrologer cum astronomer Varahamihira of 6th century AD along with translation and commentary by Veneet Kumar & Sreenadh OG. Lagna Varahi : A4 size. 80 pages. eBook price : Rs.100/- ($2). Paperback: Rs.200/- ($4). eBook copy available worldwide, Paperback edition only within India. The book contain a detailed discussion on various subjects such as house-planet results to be told for male as well as female horoscope, rare combinations not found anywhere else, and few unique observations on prasna. This text is in many ways special. Some of them are - * It is like brief formula book for the astrologer; brewing the results into small slokas. For example the r...
Chiefly statements and observations by historians, Western and Indic.