An Anthology on Aspects of Indian Culture
author: Dr. V. Raghavan
edition: 2002, Dr. V Raghavan Institute of Performing Arts, Chennai
pages: 518
ISBN-10: 819219941X
ISBN-13: 9788192199412
Topic: History
Chapter 18 - Hindu View of War
This chapter describes Hindu View of War located on page 185 in the book An Anthology on Aspects of Indian Culture compiled by Dr. V. Raghavan. This book comprises a variety and integration in the pattern of Indian Culture. This theme is supported by another paper on ‘Religious Harmony’ which begins with an apt quotation form the Mahabharatha.
This present collection reveals, in essence, the multi-faceted approach of Dr. Raghavan, as a true and sincere torch-bearer of the best of ancient Indian cultural values. This volume—including Hindu View of War—would certainly be of great interest to the young and the old, and to the lay and the learned alike.
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You can look up the meaning of the phrase “Hindu View of War” according to 28 books dealing with History. The following list shows a short preview of potential definitions.
Triveni Journal
But this was not feasible as no body appreciated his demand and so he took the other way round misinterpreting Gandhi s writings just before the AICC Bombay Congress session that the latter could not achieve Swaraj all these years though with Himdu Muslim unity and that he was a total failure....
Read full contents: Jinnah’s Opposition To Gandhi in The Quit India Movement
Temples in and around Madurantakam [by B. Mekala]
The colonial historians were not much concentrated in the aspect of the States control over the Hindu religious institutions. It was viewed that by the mid Nineteenth Century the British Government had given up most policies which involved it directly with Hindu institutions, primarily due to the pressure from Christian Evangelicals in England and by the bitter experience of the Indian Mutiny. This view was advanced so many times in so many different contexts....
Read full contents: Introduction (Colonial State and Temple)
Temples of Munnur (Historical Study) [by R. Muthuraman]
This system was in tune with the Hindu view of life, in which every day human affair was a ritualized religious act. Therefore the concept of secular life at Munnur was subordinated to the religious life. This was the idealized concept of Hinduism. The Hindu temple reflects the idealized aspect by being the pivot of almost all secular acts....
Read full contents: Temples as student’s feuding centre
Total 28 books found: See all results here.
Summary:
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[An Anthology on Aspects of Indian Culture: index]
[Foreword]