Indian art and culture Flashcards
Char Dham pilgrimage?
- proposed four-lane expressway to Gangotri, Yamunotri, Kedarnath and Bardinath in UK
- The highway will be called Char Dham Mahamarg(Char Dham Highway) and the highway construction project will be called as Char Dham Mahamarg Vikas Pariyojana
- among the flagship projects of the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways.
- SC constituted a High Powered Committee to look into Env concerns
- members: Representatives from Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Physical Research Laboratory under government’s space department and Ministry of Defence
- It shall consider cumulative and independent impact of Chardham project on entire Himalayan valleys.
- Committee will also suggest areas in which afforestation should be taken and kind of saplings to be planted.
Shyamoli?
It is the heritage house of Rabindranath Tagore. It was recently inaugurated.
Shyamoli is an experimental mud-house built at Santiniketan in 1935. The house has been recently renovated by the Archaeological Survey of India as a deposit work and is a property of Visva-Bharati at present.
Know India Programme?
- Know India Programme is a flagship programme of Ministry of External Affairs for engagement with Indian origin youth (between 18-30 years) to enhance their awareness about India, its cultural heritage, art and to familiarise them with various aspects of contemporary India.
- Eligibility: Minimum qualification required for participating in KIP is graduation from a recognized University /Institute or enrolled for graduation and ability to speak in English.
- The applicant should not have visited India through any previous Programme of Government of India. Those who have not visited India before will be given preference.
Aadi Mahotsav?
- It is a joint initiative of Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Government of India & TRIFED
- Mahotsav will comprise of display and sale of items of tribal art and craft, tribal medicine & healers, tribal cuisine and display of tribal folk performance, in which tribal artisans, chefs, folk dancers/musicians from 23 States of the country shall participate and provide glimpse of their rich traditional culture.
Navroz festival?
- It is a Parsi New Year festival celebrated to mark the beginning of the new Iranian calendar.
- While the Balkans, the Caucasus, the Middle Easterns celebrate the festival on March 21, the first day of the Zoroastrian calendar, in India there is another version of the festival that is followed according to the Shahanshahi calendar and falls during the later months of the year. The dates change every year since the calendar doesn’t account for leap years.
- Also known as Pateti, Navroz will be celebrated on August 17th this year in India.
- Navroz is also known as Jamshed-i-Navroz after the Persian King, Jamshed, who is credited to have created the Persian Calendar known as the Shahenshahi Calendar.
- The time of the festival is decided in Iran and then it is passed on to the entire Zoroastrian population in the world.
Maharshi Badrayan Vyas Samman’ Awards?
- conferred on persons in recognition of their substantial contribution in the field of Sanskrit, Persian, Arabic, Pali, Prakrit, Classical Oriya, Classical Kannada, Classical Telugu and Classical Malayalam.
- Introduced in the year 2002.
- Eligibility: Given to selected young scholars in the age group of 30 to 45 years.
- Carries a certificate of honour, a memento and a one-time cash prize of Rs.1 lakh.
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maharshi Badrayan:
- an Indian philosopher about whom almost no personal details are reliably known.
- Badarayana is regarded as having written the basic text of the Vedanta system, the Vedāntasūtrak.a. Brahmasūtra.
- He is thus considered the founder of the Vedānta system of philosophy.
- The date of Badarayana and his Brahma Sutras is uncertain. Different scholars have dated the Brahma Sutras variously from 500 BCE to 450 BCE.
Brahma sutras?
- The text systematizes and summarizes the philosophical and spiritual ideas in the Upanishads. It is one of the foundational texts of the Vedānta school of Hindu philosophy.
- Credited to Maharshi Badrayan
- Brahma sutras consists of 555 aphoristic verses (sutras) in four chapters. These verses are primarily about the nature of human existence and universe, and ideas about the metaphysical concept of Ultimate Reality called Brahman.
- The first chapter discusses the metaphysics of Absolute Reality.
- The second chapter reviews and addresses the objections raised by the ideas of competing orthodox schools of Hindu philosophies as well as heterodox schools such as Buddhism and Jainism.
- The third chapter discusses epistemology and path to gaining spiritually liberating knowledge.
- The last chapter states why such a knowledge is an important human need.
Bir Chilarai?
Bir Chilarai (1510 – 1571 CE) was a brave warrior and general of the Assamese Koch royal dynasty.
He was the younger brother of Nara Narayan, the king of the Kamata Kingdom.
What are Sattras?
- Sattras are monastic institutions created as part of the 16th century Neo-Vaishnavite reformist movement started by Vaishnavite saint-reformer Srimanta Sankaradeva
- Today, Sattras are spread across the state, promulgating Sankardeva’s unique “worship through art” approach with music (borgeet), dance (xattriya) and theatre (bhauna).
- There are about 900 Sattras across Assam, but the main centres are Bordowa (Nagaon), Majuli and Barpeta
- Each Sattra has a naamghar (worship hall) as its nucleus and is headed by an influential “Sattradhikar”.
- Monks, known as bhakats, are inducted into Sattras at a young age. They may or may not be celibate, depending on the kind of Sattra they are inducted into.
- During the Ahom reign, the Sattras received a lot of donations in the form of land or money from the kings.
What is Sankardeva’s philosophy?
Sankardeva propagated a form of Bhakti called eka-sharana-naam-dhrama, and espoused a society based on equality and fraternity, free from caste differences, orthodox Brahmanical rituals and sacrifices.
His teaching focused on prayer and chanting (naam) instead of idol worship.
His dharma was based on the four components of deva (god), naam (prayers), bhakats (devotees), and guru (teacher).
As the saint travelled across Assam,Sattras/Thans were established as centres of religious, social and cultural reforms in the 16th century.
Bao Dhaan?
Iron-rich ‘red rice’ is grown in the Brahmaputra Valley of Assam without the use of any chemical fertilizer. This variety of rice is referred to as ‘Bao-dhaan’, which is an integral part of the Assamese food culture.
Assam’s Bao-dhaan is being exported to America now.
Kavindracharya Saraswati was in the court of ?
shahenshah
Who authored Sirr-i-Akbari?
Dara Shukoh, son of Shahanshah, believed that upanishads will help understand quran better, so he had upanishads translated
Jnapith award started in ? T/F: eligibility for Jnapith award is Any INDIAN citizen who writes in any of the scheduled languages of India
1961 F; Any Indian citizen who writes in any of the official languages of India
What is Operation ‘Clean Art’?
first pan India operation to crackdown on the smuggling of mongoose hair.
Hornbill festival?
-> Nagas; also called the “Festival of Festivals” ->pays tribute to Hornbill, the most admired and revered bird for the Nagas for its qualities of alertness and grandeur. -> established on 1st December 1963 and was inaugurated by the then President Dr. S Radhakrishnan
karkabhat?
Megalithic burial site in Chhatisgarh
Dipadih?
Temple complex dating back to the 7th Century in Chhatisgarh
contains the remnants of the Shaiv and Shakya sects.
ghotul?
- It is both an ancient tribal system of education as well as the campus with its own system of hierarchs
- It is an integral part of Gond and Muria tribal life in regions of Chhattisgarh and the neighboring areas in Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh
- It is a place for youths, an independent and autonomous “children’s republic”
- The ghotul is central to social and religious life in Gond society. According to Gond legend, Lingo, the supreme deity, created the first ghotul
- It has an elder facilitator with young, unmarried boys and girls as its members. Girl members of the ghotul are called motiaris, while boy members are called cheliks.
- The members are taught lessons of cleanliness, discipline, and hard work. They are taught to take pride in their appearance and to respect themselves and their elders. They are also taught the idea of public service.
Sonabai?
Famous bas relief ornamentation works of Chhattisgarh got its roots when Sonabai made little toys for her son Daroga Ram to lull him to sleep
Tulu language?
- Tulu is a Dravidian language spoken mainly in two coastal districts Dakshina Kannada and Udupi of Karnataka and Kasaragod district of Kerala.
- ~18 L speakers in total
- Some scholars suggest Tulu is among the earliest Dravidian languages with a history of 2000 years. Robert Caldwell (1814-1891), in his book, A Comparative Grammar of the Dravidian or South-Indian Family of Languages, called Tulu “one of the most highly developed languages of the Dravidian family”.
- Tulu speakers have been requesting the govt to give it official language status and include it in eighth schedule
- Tulu has a rich oral literature tradition with folk-song forms like paddana, and traditional folk theatre yakshagana. Tulu also has an active tradition of cinema with around 5 to 7 Tulu language movies produced a year.
Classification of stone age in three ages?
- Palaeolithic age (old stone age): Period – 500,000 – 10,000 BCE
- Mesolithic age (late stone age): Period – 10,000 – 6000 BCE
- Neolithic age (new stone age): Period – 6000 – 1000 BCE
Paleolithic age in India: main characterestics?
- The old stone age or palaeolithic culture of India developed in the Pleistocene period or the Ice Age, which is a geological period of the age when the earth was covered with ice and the weather was so cold that human or plant life could not survive. But in the tropical region, where ice melted, the earliest species of men could exist.
- The Indian people are believed to have belonged to the ‘Negrito’ race, and lived in the open air, river valleys, caves and rock shelters.
- They were food gatherers, ate wild fruits and vegetables, and lived on hunting.
- There was no knowledge of houses, pottery, agriculture. It was only in later stages they discovered fire.
- In the upper palaeolithic age, there is evidence of art in the form of paintings.
- Humans used unpolished, rough stones like hand axes, choppers, blades, burins and scrapers.
- Palaeolithic men are also called ‘Quartzite’ men in India as the stone tools were made of a hard rock called quartzite.
- The old stone age or palaeolithic age in India is divided into three phases according to the nature of the stone tools used by the people and also according to the nature of the change of climate.
Paleolithic age in India: Lower Paleolithic age?
Lower Palaeolithic Age: up to 100,000 BC
- It covers the greater part of the Ice Age.
- Hunters and food gatherers; tools used were hand axes, choppers and cleavers. Tools were rough and heavy.
- One of the earliest lower Palaeolithic sites is Bori in Maharashtra.
- Limestone was also used to make tools.
- There are habitation sites including caves and rock shelters.
- An important place is Bhimbetka in Madhya Pradesh.