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Hinduism and its Sources

Most scholars believe Hinduism started somewhere between 2300 B.C. and 1500 B.C. in the Indus Valley, near modern-day Pakistan. But many Hindus argue that their faith is timeless and has always existed. Unlike other religions, Hinduism has no one founder but is instead a fusion of various beliefs

 

 

Blog posts

  • 11 (Eleven) Rudra Avatars of Lord Shiva (Illustration for Blog)

    The Eleven (11) Rudra Avatars of Lord Shiva – A Detailed Exposition including Planetary Mapping, Mantras & Methods of Worship

    The Ekādaśa Rudras are not merely names but cosmic principles embodied as divine forms. In texts like the Shiva Purana and Linga Purana, they emerge from Shiva to regulate creation, destroy imbalance, and guide souls toward liberation. Below is also...

  • The Sacred Fire: Agni in Hinduism, Fire Rituals in World Cultures, and Anthropological Insights from Art, Language & History

    The Sacred Fire: Agni in Hinduism, Fire Rituals in World Cultures, and Anthropological Insights from Art, Language & History

    From the earliest cave paintings to the most complex Vedic sacrifices, fire has been humanity’s most sacred companion. It cooks food, protects life, transforms matter—and connects the human world with the divine. Across civilizations, fire is worshipped, feared, and revered as a living presence, not merely a physical phenomenon.

    In Hinduism, this sacred presence is Agni, the divine fire. In world cultures, fire appears as ritual flame, hearth spirit, eternal lamp, and sacrificial offering. Anthropology, linguistics, and art reveal that fire is one of the oldest religious symbols in human history.

    This article explores:

    • Agni’s role in Hindu philosophy and ritual

    • Fire rituals across world cultures

    • Anthropological insights from art, language, and history

  • Fierce Demons in Mahavatar Narsimha: Movie vs Mythology - Motilal Banarsidass

    Fierce Demons in Mahavatar Narsimha: Movie vs Mythology

    In the mythic grandeur of Mahavatar Narsimha, the eternal struggle between dharma and adharma is not merely a tale of good versus evil—it is an exploration of cosmic balance, divine justice, and human arrogance. The movie Mahavatar Narsimha reimagines this...