Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/History_of_Shaktism> ?p ?o }
- History_of_Shaktism abstract "The roots of Shaktism – a Hindu denomination that focuses worship upon Shakti or Devi, the Hindu Divine Mother – penetrate deeply into India's prehistory. From the Devi's earliest known appearance in Indian Paleolithic settlements more than 20,000 years ago, through the refinement of her cult in the Indus Valley Civilization, her partial eclipse during the Vedic period, and her subsequent resurfacing and expansion in Sanskrit tradition, it has been suggested that, in many ways, \"the history of the Hindu tradition can be seen as a reemergence of the feminine.\"Shaktism as it exists today began with the literature of the Vedic Age, further evolved during the formative period of the Hindu epics, reached its full flower during the Gupta Age (300-700 CE), and continued to expand and develop thereafter. Devi Mahatmya, an important text in Shaktism, was composed around fifth or sixth century CE. Here, for the first time, \"the various mythic, cultic and theological elements relating to diverse female divinities were brought together in what has been called the 'crystallization of the Goddess tradition.'\" Other important texts include the Lalita Sahasranama, the Devi Gita, Adi Shankara's Saundaryalahari and the Tantras.Recent developments related to Shaktism include the emergence of Bharat Mata (\"Mother India\") symbolism, the increasing visibility of Hindu female saints and gurus, and the prodigious rise of the \"new\" goddess Santoshi Mata following release of the Indian film Jai Santoshi Maa (\"Hail to the Mother of Satisfaction\") in 1975. As one commentator notes:\"Today just as 10,000 years ago, images of the Goddess are everywhere in India. You'll find them painted on the sides of trucks, pasted to the dashboards of taxis, postered on the walls of shops. You'll often see a color painting of the Goddess prominently displayed in Hindu homes. Usually the picture is hung high on the wall so you have to crane your neck backward, looking up toward her feet. [...] In India, Goddess worship is not a 'cult,' it's a religion, [...] an extraordinarily spiritually and psychologically mature tradition. Millions of people turn every day with heartfelt yearning to the Mother of the Universe.\"".
- History_of_Shaktism thumbnail Statuette_Mehrgarh.jpg?width=300.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageExternalLink Bengali-Shakta.html.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageExternalLink Thanthrasastra_1.MP3.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageExternalLink k_0.htm.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageID "13941961".
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageLength "39922".
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageOutDegree "131".
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageRevisionID "680232186".
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Adi_Parashakti.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Adi_Shankara.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Aditi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Advaita_Vedanta.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Agni.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Allahabad.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Bhadrakali.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Bhagavathi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Bhakti.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Bharat_Mata.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Bhaskararaya.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Bhūmi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Brahman.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Brahmanda_Purana.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Carnatic_music.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hindu_denominations.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shaktism.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Dakṣiṇācāra.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Devi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Devi-Bhagavata_Purana.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Devi_Kanya_Kumari.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Devi_Mahatmya.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Dravidian_peoples.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Durga.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink File:Durga_Mahisasuramardini.JPG.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink File:Jai_Santoshi_Maa.jpg.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Gupta_Empire.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Harappa.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Himavat.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_denominations.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Indra.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Indus_Valley_Civilisation.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Jai_Santoshi_Maa.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Jammu_and_Kashmir.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink John_Woodroffe.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Kali.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Kalika_Purana.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Kamalamba_Navavarna_Kritis.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Kena_Upanishad.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Korravai.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Kundalini_yoga.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Lajja_Gauri.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Lakshmi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Lalita_Sahasranama.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mahabharata.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mantric.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Markandeya_Purana.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mata_Amritanandamayi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Matrikas.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Meenakshi_Amman_Temple.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mehrgarh.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mirzapur.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mohenjo-daro.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Mother_Meera.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Murti.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Muthuswami_Dikshitar.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Navadurga.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Neolithic.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink New7Wonders_of_the_World.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Panchamakara.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Parvati.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Prakṛti.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Prithvi.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Puja_(Hinduism).
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Puranas.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Rajas.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Ramakrishna.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Ramayana.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Ramprasad_Sen.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Rigveda.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Sahasranama.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Santoshi_Mata.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Saraswati.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Sattva.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Shakti.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Shaktism.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Shiva.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Shri_Vidya.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Silappatikaram.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Soundarya_Lahari.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Sri_Aurobindo.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Swami_Vivekananda.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Sādhanā.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Tamas_(philosophy).
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Tamil_literature.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Tantra.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Tantras.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Tattva.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Tattva_(Kashmir_Shaivism).
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink The_Gospel_of_Sri_Ramakrishna.
- History_of_Shaktism wikiPageWikiLink Upanishads.