Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Women_in_Hinduism> ?p ?o }
- Women_in_Hinduism abstract "Hindu texts present diverse and conflicting views on the position of women, ranging from feminine leadership as the highest goddess to limiting her role to an obedient daughter, housewife and mother. The Devi Sukta hymn of Rigveda, a scripture of Hinduism, declares the feminine energy as the essence of the universe, the one who creates all matter and consciousness, the eternal and infinite, the metaphysical and empirical reality (Brahman), the soul (supreme self) of everything. The woman is celebrated as the most powerful and the empowering force in some Hindu Upanishads, Sastras and Puranas, particularly the Devi Upanishad, Devi Mahatmya and Devi-Bhagavata Purana.In Smritis, such as the Manusmriti, the position of women in Hinduism is mixed and contradictory. Manusmriti asserts that \"as a girl, she should obey and seek protection of her father, as a young woman her husband, and as a widow her son\". In other sections, the same text asserts that \"women must be honored and adorned\", and \"where women are revered, there the gods rejoice; but where they are not, no sacred rite bears any fruit\". However, scholars have questioned the authenticity and corruption of the text over time, given the numerous inconsistent version of the Smriti manuscripts that have been discovered.Ancient and medieval era Hindu texts present a diverse picture of duties and rights of women in Hinduism. The texts recognize eight kinds of marriage, ranging from father finding a marriage partner for his daughter and seeking her consent (Brahma marriage), to the bride and groom finding each other without parental participation (Gandharva marriage). Scholars state that Vedic era Hindu texts, and records left by travelers to ancient and medieval India, suggest ancient and early medieval Hindu society did not practice Dowry or Sati. These practices likely became widespread sometime in the 2nd millennium CE from socio-political developments in the Indian subcontinent.Hinduism, states Bryant, has the strongest presence of the divine feminine among major world religions, from ancient times to the present. The goddess is viewed as central in Shakti and Saiva Hindu traditions.".
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageExternalLink 1465852.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageExternalLink 223416.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageExternalLink 3173084.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageExternalLink books?id=Wx11yQK3J3QC.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageID "1196847".
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageLength "89188".
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageOutDegree "168".
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageRevisionID "706472519".
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Absolute_(philosophy).
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Adi_Parva.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Adi_Shankara.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Al-Biruni.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_the_Great.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Andal.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Anushasana_Parva.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Ardhanarishvara.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Aristocracy.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Arrian.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Arthashastra.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Arvind_Sharma.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Atharvaveda.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Bahvricha_Upanishad.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Bhakti.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Bhakti_movement.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Bhavabhuti.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Bhishma.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Brahmacharya.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Brahman.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Brahmin.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Bride_price.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Brihadaranyaka_Upanishad.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gender_and_Hinduism.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hindu_law.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Women_and_religion.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Womens_rights_in_religious_movements.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Chalukya_dynasty.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Common-law_marriage.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Deva_(Hinduism).
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Devadasi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Devi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Devi-Bhagavata_Purana.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Devi_Mahatmya.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Devi_Upanishad.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Dharma.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Dowry.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Draupadi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Europe.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Flavia_Agnes.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Gandharva_marriage.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Gargi_Vachaknavi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Grihastha.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Guru.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Henotheism.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_Widows_Remarriage_Act,_1856.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_deities.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_philosophy.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_texts.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Hinduism.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Jauhar.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Kalpa_(Vedanga).
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Kama_Sutra.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Lakshmi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink List_of_female_mystics.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Madhvacharya.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Madhya_Pradesh.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Mahabharata.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Mahatma_Gandhi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Maitreyi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Manipur.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Manusmṛti.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Marco_Polo.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Markandeya_Purana.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Max_Müller.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Medhātithi.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Witzel.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Modern_history.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad_bin_Qasim.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Murti.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Muslin.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Nammalvar.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Nepal.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Parvati.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Patanjali.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Patrick_Olivelle.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Postmodernism.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Prakṛti.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Purusha.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Pyre.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Pāṇini.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Rajasthan.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Rajput.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Ramayana.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Relief.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Remarriage.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Rigveda.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Samhita.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Sanskara_(rite_of_passage).
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Sanskrit.
- Women_in_Hinduism wikiPageWikiLink Saraswati.